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Monday, December 23, 2024

313 Illinois patients pass away by Jan. 17 after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine

Covid 42 edited

In Illinois, 313 people died by Jan. 17 after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS).

The oldest person to pass away after being administered a COVID-19 vaccine was 106-years-old. The youngest was 18-years-old.

Of all residents in Illinois who received a vaccine of some type, 413 died.

The longest time recorded between a COVID-19 vaccine being administered and the onset of symptoms in someone who passed away was 91 days.

The most common adverse reactions after being given any vaccine in those who passed away and those who recovered were "Injection site erythema" and "Chills".

There were 18,238 people in Illinois who recovered.

Fatalities in America among the vaccinated in 2021 have increased 76.05 percent from the previous decade.

Before 2021, the most devastating year on record for fatalities after receiving a vaccine was 2010, when 143 people died.

Peter A. McCullough, a respected cardiologist and epidemiologist, initially supported the rollout of vaccines but is now an avid opponent of the COVID-19 vaccines.

"It's my judgement at this point in time that the vaccine is the cause of death in a majority of cases," he claimed in an interview. "I think it's fine for people to change their view of the vaccine and they should based on emerging data."

All deaths which occur after a COVID-19 vaccination was administered must be investigated, as required by the Emergency Use Authorization given by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The EUA allowed COVID-19 vaccines to be distributed so quickly.

The FDA has approved three vaccines: Pfizer-BioNTech for ages 5 and up, Moderna for ages 12 and up and Johnson & Johnson vaccines for ages 18 and up.

The Oxford-Astrazeneca vaccine, available widely around the world, has yet to be approved. It’s linked to a rare blood clot disorder that temporarily halted its rollout in places like the U.K.

A previously published report from Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Inc. found adverse events from drugs and vaccines are "common, but underreported."

"Low reporting rates preclude or slow the identification of 'problem' drugs and vaccines that endanger public health," the report stated.

The VAERS system, by admission of its creators, doesn't fully indicate the situation of someone's death.

"A report to VAERS generally does not prove that the identified vaccine(s) caused the adverse event described. It only confirms that the reported event occurred sometime after vaccine was given," says a disclaimer on the VAERS website.

Statistics represented in the story and corresponding graphs differ slightly due to streamlined data collection.

Data is accurate as of Jan. 17.

Illinois deaths by month after receiving a vaccine
MonthCOVID vaccine deathsOther vaccine deaths
Dec 202020
Jan 2021291
Feb 2021550
Mar 2021722
Apr 2021373
May 2021170
Jun 2021131
Jul 2021130
Aug 202180
Sep 2021182
Oct 202180
Nov 2021110
Dec 202194
Jan 202220

Illinois deaths by year after receiving a vaccine
YearCOVID vaccine deathsOther vaccine deaths
2016-0
2017-10
2018-5
2019-6
202023
202129013
202220

* Not all reported deaths had a date of death included, and they were excluded from the data.

Illinois lives lost after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine

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