Opinion: No one ever claimed EU politicians had a monopoly on intelligence or understanding of science. What a bunch of raving idiots. https://t.co/Z8fbHPSg7S
— ?? Bill Comeau Crush the Curve ? (@Billius27) March 16, 2021
EU regulator ‘convinced’ AstraZeneca benefit outweighs risk https://t.co/tPFtORovo7
— Seung Min Kim (@seungminkim) March 16, 2021
"Blood clots are common in the general population, and health authorities suspect that the cases reported in vaccine recipients are most likely coincidental and not related to the vaccination." https://t.co/oG8rJjVQkf
— Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (@JohnsHopkinsSPH) March 16, 2021
Should You Be Concerned About Blood Clots, Bleeding and the AZ-Vaccine?
— Anders Perner (@AndersPerner) March 16, 2021
Worth a read
https://t.co/X28w4dVEN7
The AstraZeneca Vaccine: Should You Be Concerned? https://t.co/kWscxf9PfE
— Prof Makau Mutua (@makaumutua) March 16, 2021
No, the Covid-19 vaccines have not been shown to cause blood clots https://t.co/tE5sfsPZLY pic.twitter.com/MghKhadWG9
— Davey Alba (@daveyalba) March 16, 2021
Should You Be Concerned About Blood Clots, Bleeding and the AZ-Vaccine? https://t.co/pzN2YxQ25Q
— Abdirashid Hashi (@AnalystSomalia) March 16, 2021
There is no evidence so far of a link between the AstraZeneca shots and a few new cases in Europe of serious illness and deaths. But investigations are underway. https://t.co/z3gXhSYx8Y
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 16, 2021
Any time there's suspicion of a problem with vaccines, we should investigate. Expected rate of blood clots in vaccinees in the US if they HADN’T gotten vaccinated? 10-20/day. https://t.co/23XnPSoNU1
— Dr. Tom Frieden (@DrTomFrieden) March 16, 2021
There is no evidence so far of a link between the AstraZeneca shots and a few new cases in Europe of serious illness and deaths. But investigations are underway. https://t.co/txVUqrYFMr
— The New York Times (@nytimes) March 16, 2021
The AstraZeneca Vaccine: Should You Be Concerned? - The New York Times https://t.co/2piMqFzHEw
— xavier sáez-llorens (@xsaezll) March 16, 2021
Blood clots are common in the general population, and health authorities suspect that cases reported in people who got AstraZeneca's Coid vaccine are most likely coincidental. https://t.co/mGPLzjpuCo
— NYT Science (@NYTScience) March 16, 2021
??? Here's a v. useful explainer on AZ and blood clots. Bref: there is not yet any definitive sign AZ is unsafe.
— Rachel Donadio (@RachelDonadio) March 16, 2021
(But there are clear signs of vaccine skepticism, populism, EU procurement delays, shortages and fumbling over vaccine rollout in ??????.)https://t.co/SjdUnqw0tP
More than a dozen countries have suspended use of AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine, because of reports of blood clots and abnormal bleeding. How serious is it? We try to sort it out. https://t.co/bPc1IDEaqW
— NYT Health (@NYTHealth) March 16, 2021
This is really such bizarre dishonesty. There are issues with the Astrazeneca vaccine. Even the NYTimes is reporting on it. Is the NYTimes peddling vaccine disinfo? https://t.co/ygxbE8ePJ0 pic.twitter.com/pWXAdzqRYN
— Geoffrey Ingersoll (@GPIngersoll) March 16, 2021
No, you shouldn't be concerned. We're talking about half a dozen people out of millions. Wouldn't surprise me if their symptoms were completely coincidental to the vaccine.https://t.co/5xOXdHlJGv
— Eddie Zipperer (@EddieZipperer) March 16, 2021
'It's easy to scare people'. Read this op-ed to understand how decisions by regulatory agencies (over-emphasizing risks over benefits while ignoring disease risks) can have long-lasting consequences on human behavior. https://t.co/fRjVNrTD6O via @usatoday
— Michael Chiorean (@mchiorean4) March 16, 2021
The AstraZeneca Vaccine: Should You Be Concerned? https://t.co/S5T7yekiUR
— Tony Leachon MD (@DrTonyLeachon) March 16, 2021
There is no evidence of a link between AstraZeneca's vaccine and blood clots. But a growing number of countries are suspending shots while authorities investigate. https://t.co/zrdfPpvdpS
— NYT Science (@NYTScience) March 17, 2021
There is no evidence so far of a link between AstraZeneca's vaccine and blood clots. But a growing number of countries are suspending shots while authorities investigate. https://t.co/0MMKj4kmBS
— NYT Health (@NYTHealth) March 17, 2021
More than a dozen countries have suspended use of AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine, because of reports of blood clots and abnormal bleeding. How serious is it? We try to sort it out. https://t.co/o2A4bmIW0N
— NYT Science (@NYTScience) March 17, 2021
Blood clots are common in the general population, and health authorities suspect that cases reported in people who got AstraZeneca's Coid vaccine are most likely coincidental. https://t.co/Q1Lrw8HXHq
— NYT Science (@NYTScience) March 17, 2021