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Coronavirus: AstraZeneca blood clot reports: what we know

Advertisement London: This week, German officials decided to limit the use of Oxford/AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine in people under 60 after more unusual blood clots were reported in a few people who received the shots. In response, Europe’s drug regulator reiterated there was “no evidence that would support restricting the use of this vaccine in any population”, though an expert said more brain clots were being reported than would be expected, and the regulator says it continues to investigate. Trays holding needles and swabs in preparation for the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccinations at Tharawal Corporation Medical Centre in Airds, in Sydney.

Coronavirus Australia: The entirely avoidable tragedy of COVID-19 vaccines and pregnant women

The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald have launched Examine, a new weekly science newsletter written by national science reporter Liam Mannix. The sixth instalment is below and you can sign up for free here. Medicine has a long history of systematically excluding women from trials of potentially life-saving drugs. We know vaccines are safe and effective for men and women. We don’t have those answers for pregnant women. Credit:Pool Now pregnant women find themselves excluded from the life-saving benefits of a COVID-19 vaccination. Because they were not part of clinical trials, we cannot know with certainty if vaccines are safe and effective for them.

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