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Plea in Supreme Court seeks study of Covishield vaccine side-effects

A plea has been lodged in the Supreme Court seeking directions to study the possible side effects of Astrazeneca’s Covishield vaccine, one of two vaccines that was administered in India against COVID-19.

The petition was lodged after Astrazeneca admitted before a court in the United Kingdom that Covishield has the potential to cause a rare side effect associated with blood clotting.

The plea filed by advocate Vishal Tiwari mentioned that AstraZeneca has accepted a link between the vaccine and Thrombosis with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome (TTS), a medical condition characterised by abnormally low levels of platelets and the formation of blood clots.

The petitioner in his plea has prayed that a medical expert committee be formed by the Supreme Court under the supervision of a retired top court judge and comprising medical experts from All India Institute of Medical Science (AIIMS) to examine the side effects of Covishield vaccine and its risk factors.

It further submitted that the Centre is required to take immediate steps for the sake of the safety and health of Indian citizens. It added that the issue has to be looked upon by the Central Government on priority so that in future no risk may occur regarding the health and life of Indian citizens. Notably, more than 175 crore Covishield have been administered in India.

The petitioner has also urged the court to order the establishment of a Vaccine Damage Payment System to compensate citizens who are severely disabled or pass away as a result of a COVID vaccine.

Earlier in August 2022, the Kerala High Court had called for urgent action from the Centre and the National Disaster Management Authority to formulate guidelines for disbursing compensation to the families of persons who died due to reactions to the Covid-19 vaccine.

Later in November 2022, when the Supreme Court was seized of a case dealing with mandatory vaccination and side effects of COVID-19 vaccines, the Central government had told the apex court that it cannot be held liable to pay compensation for deaths caused by adverse reactions to COVID-19 vaccines.

Furthermore, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) said the same in response to a plea by the parents of two young women who had died allegedly due to the adverse effects of COVID-19 vaccine.

The Centre then told the Supreme Court that vaccines manufactured by third parties had successfully undergone regulatory review, and holding the state directly liable to provide compensation may not be legally sustainable.

It stated that the vaccines in use under the vaccination program are manufactured by third parties and have successfully undergone thorough regulatory review in India and other nations, being recognised globally as safe and effective.

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