vaccines Archives - South Africa Gateway https://southafrica-info.com/tag/vaccines/ Here is a tree rooted in African soil. Come and sit under its shade. Thu, 31 Oct 2024 12:27:01 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://southafrica-info.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/cropped-2000px-flag_of_south_africa-svg-32x32.png vaccines Archives - South Africa Gateway https://southafrica-info.com/tag/vaccines/ 32 32 136030989 AstraZeneca Covid vaccine withdrawn because it’s outdated – not for ‘dangerous side effect’ https://southafrica-info.com/fact-checks/astrazeneca-covid-vaccine-withdrawn-because-its-outdated-not-for-dangerous-side-effect/ Tue, 21 May 2024 12:01:23 +0000 https://southafrica-info.com/?p=4537 21 May 2024 – Pharma giant AstraZeneca has acknowledged the rare side effect of its coronavirus vaccine for years. The drug has now been withdrawn simply because it can’t compete with newer and better alternatives.

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Pharma giant AstraZeneca has acknowledged the rare side effect of its coronavirus vaccine for years. The drug has now been withdrawn simply because it can’t compete with newer and better alternatives.

MARY ALEXANDER • 21 MAY 2024
Published by Africa Check on 6 June 2024

AstraZeneca Covid vaccine withdrawn because it’s outdated – not for ‘dangerous side effect’


“AstraZaneca Covid 19 vaccine withdrawn worldwide after manufacturers admitted it can cause dangerous side effect,” reads a claim circulating on social media in Ghana and elsewhere in May 2024.*

The vaccine was developed at the UK’s Oxford University in the first year of the Covid pandemic, in collaboration with the pharma company AstraZeneca. Its generic name is ChAdOx1-S and its brand names Covishield and Vaxzevria.

It’s been used in more than 100 countries across the world, with some 3 billion jabs given. In February 2021 the West African country of Ghana was the first on the continent to roll out, under the Covax facility, what was then known as the AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccine.

Many versions of the claim use a graphic showing a vial of vaccine and the text: “AstraZeneca Covid vaccine withdrawn worldwide, months after its manufacturers admitted the vaccine can cause a rare and dangerous side effect.”

The graphic includes the logo of TV3 Ghana, while the text is credited to the Telegraph, a UK newspaper. In Ghana, it’s been posted with comments such as:

  • Do you even know the type of vaccine administered to you? That’s why I never tried that madness.
  • A Woe Generation.Wicked men at the TOP…When God warns,people won’t listen.A generation who trust scientists,elits more than the Almighty God.
  • It took them 4 years of arrogance and self enrichment to finally admit they’ve killed and caused long lasting life defects to billions of people. The health sector needs a change.

Other versions of the claim link to the Telegraph article.

When it was first published on 7 May, the article’s headline read: “AstraZeneca withdrawing Covid vaccine, months after admitting rare side effect.”

It’s since been altered to read: “AstraZeneca withdrawing Covid vaccine worldwide.” No reason for the change is given.

Some online users have taken the claim further, saying that the vaccine has been withdrawn due to a “rare and severe side effect”.

The claim can also be seen here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here.

AstraZeneca has withdrawn its Covid vaccine, voluntarily. And the vaccine does have a rare and sometimes fatal side effect.

But the side effect, which the company has acknowledged for years, has nothing to do with the vaccine’s withdrawal.

Side effect identified in 2021, noted in package inserts

The AstraZeneca vaccine’s most severe side effect is thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome, or TTS. Thrombosis is a blood clot in the blood vessels or the heart, which can lead to stroke, heart attack or an embolism in the lungs. Thrombocytopenia is a low platelet count in the blood.

TTS is rare, occurring in two to three people for every 100,000 who got the jab. When it has occurred, it has led to death in a range from 5% to 50% of cases.

On the other hand, it’s been independently estimated that the AstraZeneca Covid vaccine saved more than 6 million lives during its first year of use.

In April 2024 the Telegraph reported that “AstraZeneca admits its Covid vaccine can cause rare side effect in court documents for first time”.

But this is misleading. All it says is that AstraZeneca has acknowledged the TTS side effect for the first time in court documents.

The company is currently facing a class action suit in the UK from families of people who have died from TTS, and others who claim to have been disabled by the vaccine.

AstraZeneca’s submission was made to the UK high court in February. The Telegraph quotes it:

It is admitted that the AZ vaccine can, in very rare cases, cause TTS. The causal mechanism is not known. Further, TTS can also occur in the absence of the AZ vaccine (or any vaccine). Causation in any individual case will be a matter for expert evidence.

TTS was first identified as a possible side effect of the AstraZeneca vaccine in March and April 2021. This was after the conclusion of the vaccine’s clinical trials, which tested it on some 60,000 people.

From April 2021 warnings about TTS as a side effect were included in package inserts and other patient information about the vaccine – here, here, here, here, here and here. It was also mentioned in AstraZeneca’s 2021 annual report.

The company has acknowledged the side effect since it was first identified three years ago.

Outcompeted and outdated

In March 2024 AstraZeneca applied to have the vaccine’s European Union marketing authorisation withdrawn, which was approved on 7 May. The vaccine is no longer manufactured or sold, and has been withdrawn across the world.

The vaccine was developed to combat the original Wuhan strain of the coronavirus and has not been updated. This means it is less effective against new variants of the virus. South Africa, for example, withdrew it in early 2021 because it gave little protection against the mutated Beta variant of the virus, then dominant in the country.

In a May 2024 statement, AstraZeneca said: “As multiple, variant Covid-19 vaccines have since been developed, there is a surplus of available updated vaccines. This has led to a decline in demand for Vaxzevria.”

Several experts have backed this up, saying that with lower demand for Covid vaccines and more effective options available, AstraZeneca no longer has any commercial reason to manufacture and distribute the jab.

AstraZeneca has withdrawn its vaccine because it’s out of date and can’t compete, not because of the long-identified TTS side effect.

The vaccine has been a target of misinformation from the start – and to the end.


* Some Facebook and Instagram users may have deleted their posts after Meta’s Third-Party Fact-Checking Program rated their claims as untrue.

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No, Japan hasn’t banned mRNA Covid jabs, and population decline due to low birth rate https://southafrica-info.com/fact-checks/japan-has-not-banned-mrna-covid-jabs-and-population-decline-due-to-low-birth-rate/ Wed, 17 Apr 2024 20:06:54 +0000 https://southafrica-info.com/?p=4748 17 April 2024 – People can still get an mRNA coronavirus vaccine in Japan – they just have to pay for it. And the country’s ageing population has nothing to do with the jab.

The post No, Japan hasn’t banned mRNA Covid jabs, and population decline due to low birth rate appeared first on South Africa Gateway.

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People can still get an mRNA coronavirus vaccine in Japan – they just have to pay for it. And the country’s ageing population has nothing to do with the jab.

MARY ALEXANDER • 17 APRIL 2024
Published by Africa Check on 19 April 2024

People can still get an mRNA coronavirus vaccination in Japan, but most of them now have to pay for it. The country’s ageing population has nothing to do with the jab.

The wealthy Asian country of Japan has banned mRNA Covid vaccines after they were linked to “sudden soaring deaths”.

That’s the claim circulating on social media in Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and elsewhere since late March 2024.*

It reads:

Japan has just banned Covid mRNA shots […] and called on other nations to follow suit after an official government study tied the injections to the nation’s soaring sudden deaths. Like many other countries around the world, Japan has been battling a crisis of skyrocketing sudden and unexpected deaths since 2021 […] the country is now facing population collapse […]

The claim has mainly been spread by an identical article published here, here, here and here. It’s attracted comments such as:

  • Thank God that I wasn’t that stupid and none of my family members were that stupid to take that COVID shots….
  • WAKE UP PEOPLE THE TRUTH IS ALL AROUND YOU ALREADY!!

The claim can also be seen here, here, here, here, here and here.

But it’s completely made up.

More than four years after Covid upended the world in 2020, dodgy websites are still trying to get clicks – and ad money – from false claims about the pandemic and the vaccines that helped bring it to a close.

Emergency vaccination legislation comes to an end

Japan has not banned mRNA vaccines. Instead, “temporary vaccinations” introduced in an amendment to the country’s Immunisation Act in 2021 expired at the end of March 2024.

The amendment made “immunisations with an urgent need for prevention” during the Covid pandemic available for free. People can still get an mRNA jab in Japan. The only difference is that most of them now have to pay for it.

From 1 April people aged 65 and older are to get the Covid jab, at a subsidised price, as a routine inoculation during the country’s autumn and winter. People under 65 who choose voluntary vaccination have to pay in full.

And far from banning mRNA Covid vaccines, in January Japanese regulators launched a new-generation mRNA vaccine that is the first of its kind to get official approval.

As Japan hasn’t banned mRNA jabs, it couldn’t have “called on other nations to follow suit”.

More than this, there is no credible evidence of any “official government study” that links Covid vaccines to the country’s “soaring sudden deaths”. Such a study would have made global headlines.

The country does have a relatively high death rate, but it’s not caused by Covid jabs.

An ageing population

Japan’s population crisis has been in the news recently, especially after the country reported that there had been a record high of 1.56 million deaths in 2022.

But this is due to an ageing population caused by a low birth rate. In 2023 government figures revealed that people aged 65 and older made up nearly 30% of Japan’s population, and people 80 and older made up 10%. In the same year, the country had its lowest number of births since records began in 1899.

The population decline has alarmed Japan’s government, which pumps some US$25 billion a year into subsidies for families with children in an effort to boost the birth rate.

But it’s still a decline, not a population “collapse”. The country’s population growth was at its lowest in 2022 – a negative 0.46% – but over the long term, the number of people in Japan has increased from 93.22 million in 1960 to 125.12 million in 2022.

And there are indications that the high number of excess deaths in 2022 were due to Covid itself – not the jabs that protected people from the disease.

Using an ad-blocking browser extension, Africa Check looked at the number of ads on web pages publishing the false claim. Six ads were blocked here, two here and here, and a whopping 14 here.


* Some claims posted on Facebook and Instagram may have been deleted by users after being rated via Meta’s Third-Party Fact-Checking Program.

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