AstraZeneca finds no evidence of increased blood clot risk
AstraZeneca said on Sunday a review of safety data of people
vaccinated with its COVID-19 vaccine has shown no evidence of an
increased risk of blood clots. The review covered more than 17
million people vaccinated in the United Kingdom and the European
Union.
The Netherlands has seen 10 cases of noteworthy adverse side effects
from AstraZeneca's vaccine, a Dutch drug watchdog said on Monday,
hours after the government put its vaccination programme on hold
following reports of possible unexpected side effects in other
countries.
A 60-year old Danish woman who died of a blood clot after receiving
AstraZeneca's vaccine had "highly unusual" symptoms, according to
the Danish Medicines Agency.
Regular booster vaccines are the future, says expert
Regular booster vaccines against the novel coronavirus will be
needed because of mutations that make it more transmissible and
better able to evade human immunity, the head of Britain's effort to
sequence the virus's genomes told Reuters.
The virus mutates around once every two weeks, slower than influenza
or HIV, but enough to require tweaks to vaccines.
Sharon Peacock, who heads the COVID-19 Genomics UK consortium which
has sequenced half of all the novel coronavirus genomes so far
mapped globally, said international cooperation was needed in the
"cat and mouse" battle.
South Korean province orders testing for foreigners
South Korea's most populous province has ordered all of its foreign
workers to be tested for COVID-19 by March 22, sparking complaints
of long lines and logistical problems, as well as of implicit
xenophobia in government messaging.
Last week, Gyeonggi province issued a sweeping administrative order
mandating all international workers be tested after at least 275
foreigners tested positive, many in outbreaks at manufacturing
plants.
[to top of second column] |
The province says the order
covers roughly 85,000 registered foreigners as
well as an unknown number of potential
undocumented workers, while those who don't
comply could face fines of up to 3 million won
($2,640).
Hong Kong's tough rules see babies isolated
Families in Asia's financial hub of Hong Kong
are suffering isolation and trauma after strict
coronavirus rules have led to babies being
separated from parents and those with newborns
herded into tiny quarantine quarters for up to
14 days. Hong Kong authorities
have ordered that anyone testing positive must go to hospital,
including babies, while all their close contacts, even those who
test negative, are sent to makeshift quarantine camps.
"It’s crazy," said one mother, who said she had to abruptly stop
breastfeeding following separation from her seven-month-old son last
week after she was diagnosed with COVID-19.
Papua New Guinea faces crisis as infections rise
The Pacific island nation of Papua New Guinea (PNG) is facing a
fresh wave of infections around the capital Port Moresby, which
neighbouring Australia and aid groups fear could overwhelm the
country's small and overstretched health system.
The Pacific Friends of Global Health warned if health services are
overwhelmed by COVID-19 the treatment of malaria, HIV and
tuberculosis would also collapse.
Half the COVID-19 tests from PNG processed by Australia have been
positive, prompting calls for faster vaccine delivery.
(Compiled by Linda Noakes; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content |