UK: More than 500 people admitted to hospital with coronavirus after getting vaccinated

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Coronavirus: 484 new COVID cases confirmed in Alberta as active infections fall
Coronavirus: 484 new COVID cases confirmed in Alberta as active infections fall

THE UK is leading the charge when it comes to rolling out coronavirus vaccines, with almost 35 million now jabbed in the UK. Despite deaths and caseloads steeply declining, hundreds of people have been admitted to hospital with COVID-19 after getting vaccinated – why is this happening?

There are many legitimate criticisms to be levelled at the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic response but the vaccine rollout has been an unmitigated success. From early procurement to fast-tracking regulatory approval through the UK’s nimble regulatory body, the UK has zoomed ahead and managed to inoculate a total of 34,346,273 people so far. Crucially, the effort is having its intended effect – cases and deaths have plummeted. Yet there are some developments that are heading in the wrong direction.

A new UK report has found more than 500 people who received their coronavirus jabs have been admitted to hospital with COVID-19.

The study found a total of 526 people were admitted to hospital and 113 people died in what the research team branded “vaccine failures”.

According to the researchers, the patients had all received one dose of the vaccine at least three weeks before they were admitted.

How worried should we be?

The majority of vaccinated people who were admitted to hospital for COVID-19 were probably infected shortly before or around the time of their vaccination, highlighting the importance of maintaining social distancing and understanding that immunity develops over time, the researchers said.

Looking at symptomatic patients, the researchers found that 40 percent of inpatients enrolled in the study developed covid-19 symptoms nought to seven days post-vaccination.

A further 19 percent developed symptoms eight to 14 days post-vaccination.

The average period period for SARS-CoV-2 (the coronavirus that causes COVID-19) to develop was around five days, meaning it is likely that many of these patients were infected before immunity developed.

The report said it was possible that “elderly and vulnerable people who had been shielding may have inadvertently been exposed and infected either through the end-to-end process of vaccination, or shortly after vaccination through behavioural changes where they wrongly assume they are immune.”

However, 12 percent showed symptoms 15 to 21 days after vaccination and 29 percent more than 21 days after vaccination.

These cases could be due to vaccination failure, meaning that the vaccine failed to provide the person with immunity, noted the researchers.

The team emphasised that this was not an unexpected finding, as the vaccines were not 100 percent effective, and that the absolute numbers of vaccinated people being admitted to hospital 21 days after their first dose were “tiny.”

The researchers reported that, among the people who developed symptoms more than 21 days post-vaccination, 113 (of 400) died with COVID-19 (28 percent).

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