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Just Say No: Alaska health care worker suffers adverse reaction after COVID-19 vaccine
Posted by: NuNativs ()
Date: December 16, 2020 09:06PM

Alaska health care worker suffers adverse reaction after COVID-19 vaccine

"I'll pass, and take my chances with mega-doses of Reishi, The Supreme Protector"...

The woman had an allergic reaction within 10 minutes of receiving the shot

A health care worker in Alaska is doing "well" after suffering an adverse reaction minutes after receiving Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine, officials said. The health care worker, who was identified as a middle-aged woman, had an allergic reaction that included flushing and shortness of breath within 10 minutes of receiving the first of Pfizer's two-dose jab on Tuesday.

She was still being observed in Bartlett Hospital's foyer at the time of the incident.

The woman, whose name is being withheld, suffered an anaphylactic reaction that required hospitalization and monitoring, and will not be receiving the second dose of the vaccine, officials said during a press briefing on Wednesday. She had no prior history of allergies and took a Benadryl to relieve the symptoms but it did not work.

Once she was admitted to Bartlett Hospital's emergency room, her symptoms resolved within moments of receiving epinephrine. She also received Pepcid and Benadryl via an intravenous drip, according to a press release. She is in stable condition and is scheduled to be released later Wednesday.

"We expected that a side effect like this could occur after reports of anaphylaxis were made in England after people there received the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine," said Alaska’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Anne Zink. "All sites that are approved to provide vaccinations in Alaska must have medications on hand to deal with an allergic reaction and that was the case in Juneau."

Alaska health officials said there would be no changes to vaccine distribution plans following the incident, and that the woman had been excited to receive the vaccine.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/16/2020 09:23PM by NuNativs.

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Re: Just Say No: Alaska health care worker suffers adverse reaction after COVID-19 vaccine
Posted by: Jennifer ()
Date: December 18, 2020 08:44PM

WATCH: Nurse passes out on live TV after taking vaccine in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Nurse Manager Tiffany Dover was okay and spoke again with local station WTVC, saying she has a condition where she often faints when she feels pain.

“It’s common for me,” she said.

[twitter.com]

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Re: Just Say No: Alaska health care worker suffers adverse reaction after COVID-19 vaccine
Posted by: NuNativs ()
Date: December 18, 2020 11:22PM

Pfizer, Moderna COVID-19 vaccines and facial paralysis: What to know

"These side effects aren't showing up till near a month later"...

After a review surfaced Tuesday on data behind Moderna’s COVID-19 jab, many have since caught onto several reported incidents of Bell’s palsy, or facial paralysis, among the trial's vaccine recipients.

Documents posted from a U.S. Food and Drug Administration committee review cited three incidents of facial paralysis among Moderna's vaccine recipients and one in the placebo group. However, due to limited data," a causal relationship to vaccination cannot be concluded at this time," the FDA said.

A top expert on Bell's palsy at Johns Hopkins Medicine recently told Fox News that the incidence of facial paralysis among trial participants is actually lower than what naturally occurs, and said the Bell's palsy can't be directly attributed to the COVID-19 vaccines.

Also, FDA documents posted ahead of the now-authorized Pfizer vaccine reported several cases of Bell’s palsy in the vaccine group, though none in the placebo group and the FDA wrote: "the four cases in the vaccine group do not represent a frequency above that expected in the general population." Those cases happened at 3, 9, 37 and 48 days after vaccination.

Nevertheless, the FDA advised watching for Bell’s palsy among recipients of Pfizer and Moderna's vaccines, the latter of which is pending formal approval from the federal agency, upon administration to the masses.

In general, the exact cause of Bell's palsy is unknown, and it usually occurs on one side of the face, though it can occur on both sides on rare occasions, according to the National Institutes of Health. Though the severity of symptoms varies, they usually improve in a few weeks, and an estimated 40,000 people are affected by this type of paralysis in the U.S. every year.

Dr. Kofi Boahene, an expert in head and neck surgery at Johns Hopkins Medicine, told Fox News that the incidence of Bell's palsy is between 15-30 cases per 100,000 people. He said the facial paralysis among trial participants can't be directly tied to the vaccine.

"By extrapolation, the computed incidence of Bell's palsy among both vaccine studies is lower than what naturally occurs," Boahene wrote to Fox News. "I will agree that the occurrence of Bell's palsy among the vaccinated volunteers cannot be directly attributed to the vaccine."

Of note, as previously reported, the FDA independent committee didn't find any specific safety concerns associated with Moderna's vaccine, and Pfizer's product has already passed the approval process required for emergency authorization. Health care workers who have been manning the coronavirus front lines for the last 10 months continue to line up for their vaccinations, the first of which rolled out on Monday. Nursing home residents have also started to receive vaccinations, as have some government officials.

The cases of Bell's palsy reported among Moderna's trial participants cropped up 22, 28 and 32 days after vaccination, with the placebo-injected patient experiencing facial paralysis 17 days after injection. Three-quarters of those cases were at the least reported as "resolving," in the FDA documents.

One of the cases involved a 67-year-old diabetes patient hospitalized for a stroke. About a month after she was vaccinated, she experienced "new facial paralysis," though it was reported as "resolving."

Another patient who received Moderna’s vaccine was a 30-year-old who developed facial paralysis 28 days after vaccination, with a coinciding upper respiratory infection, though that was reported as resolved.

Finally, among the vaccine group, an elderly patient also developed facial paralysis 22 days after vaccination, reported as ongoing at the time of a safety report submitted in late November.

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