Public anxiety over the safety of flu vaccine has surged after at
least 59 people died this month following vaccinations, while last
month about 5 million doses had to be disposed of as they were not
stored at recommended temperatures.
Authorities have said they found no direct link between the deaths
and the vaccines against flu, which kills at least 3,000 South
Koreans each year.
"Do trust the health authorities' conclusion...reached after a
review with experts," President Moon Jae-in said.
"There is a need to expand the influenza vaccination this year not
only to prevent the flu, but also to ward off concurrent infection
and spread of flu and COVID-19," he told a meeting.
Last year, more than 1,500 elderly people died within seven days of
receiving flu vaccines, but those deaths were not linked to the
vaccinations, the government said.
South Korea, which began free inoculations for the last eligible
group on Monday, has ordered 20% more flu vaccines this year to
banish the prospect of concurrent major outbreaks of flu and
coronavirus in winter, which would strain its health system.
It said more than 14.7 million people have been inoculated.
About 1,200 instances of adverse reactions have been reported among
them, but no direct link with vaccinations has been established,
though 13 deaths are still being investigated.
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The benefits of vaccination far outweigh any side effects, the health ministry
has said.
Severe adverse reactions to the flu vaccines are rare, with just one in 500,000
or a million people suffering anaphylactic shock, a life-threatening condition
typically brought on within seconds to minutes in those with an allergy, a top
health official told Monday's briefing.
No such case has been reported, the government said.
The southeast Asian city state of Singapore became one of the first nations this
week to call a temporary halt to the use of two influenza vaccines, as a
precaution, despite no reports of any deaths that could be linked.
South Korea said influenza infections dropped to 1.2 per 1,000 people in the
week of Oct. 11 to 17, from 4.6 in the corresponding week a year ago.
(Interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus: https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps)
(Reporting by Sangmi Cha; Editing by Miyoung Kim and Clarence Fernandez)
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