U.S. health authorities came close to simply warning about a blood-clotting risk from Johnson & Johnson ’s Covid-19 vaccine, but decided to recommend pausing use out of concern doctors would improperly treat the condition, people familiar with the matter said.

Over the previous four weeks, American health officials had become alarmed about similar blood-clotting conditions in Europe involving a Covid-19 vaccine from AstraZeneca PLC, the people said. The officials dug into a U.S. vaccine-safety database and identified the cases of great concern, but debated what action to take.

By last Monday night, the officials resolved that urgent action was needed, the people said. Four of six women in the U.S. who developed the blood clots days after vaccination had initially been given heparin, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Its use could have worsened the patients’ condition, the people said.

That night, the country’s top health officials agreed during a one-hour Zoom meeting to take the strongest step: publicly recommend pausing the vaccine’s use while probing the adverse-event cases, the people said.

Since the announcement, the Food and Drug Administration has been studying other reports of additional blood-clotting cases among people who received J&J’s vaccine, but hasn’t confirmed whether any reflect the same phenomenon, the people said. Yet officials are growing more persuaded, the people added, that the six total cases reported so far are related to the shot.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Black mermaids came to slay at annual Coney Island parade

The 41st annual Mermaid Parade at Coney Island in New York City…

Failed response to Capitol riot shows deep divide over police use of force

The reckoning of American police entered a new chapter this week with…

Nike Sales Jump But Inventory Remains Elevated

.css-j6808u{margin-left:10px;margin-right:10px;} .css-1elqs3z-Box{margin-bottom:var(–spacing-spacer-4);display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;} .css-1xk85qb-BreadcrumbsWrapper{font-size:var(–typography-summary-font-size-s);font-family:var(–font-font-stack-retina-narrow);font-weight:var(–typography-summary-standard-s-font-weight);text-transform:uppercase;}@media print{.css-1xk85qb-BreadcrumbsWrapper nav ul{margin-left:0px;}.css-1xk85qb-BreadcrumbsWrapper nav li{font-size:var(–typography-summary-font-size-s);padding-left:0px;color:var(–secondary-text-color);}.css-1xk85qb-BreadcrumbsWrapper nav li a:after{content:”;}.css-1xk85qb-BreadcrumbsWrapper a{-webkit-text-decoration:underline;text-decoration:underline;color:var(–color-black);border-bottom:none;}.css-1xk85qb-BreadcrumbsWrapper…

Trump-allied lawyer says he’ll take the Fifth with Jan. 6 committee

John Eastman, the lawyer who wrote memos arguing then-Vice President Mike Pence…