The UK Government have released their twenty-sixth report highlighting adverse reactions to the Covid-19 injections that have occurred since the roll-out began on the 8th December 2020.
The U.K. Governments report (which you can find here) has collated data inputted up to the 21st July via the MHRA Yellow Card Scheme. At this point an estimated 20.4 million first doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech injection, 24.7 million first doses of the Oxford University/AstraZeneca injection, had been administered. There were also around 12.9 million second doses of the Pfizer jab, 23.2 million second doses of the AstraZeneca jab, and 0.3 million second doses of the Moderna jab administered at this point.
Our earliest analysis of the data which we brought you back at the beginning of February showed that there had been 49,472 adverse reactions to the Pfizer jab, and 21,032 adverse reactions to the Oxford jab up to the 24th January 2021, with a rate of 1 in every 333 people receiving the jab suffering a serious adverse reaction.
This number has since increased to a rate of 1 in every 142 people, however the MHRA state that just 1-10% of adverse reactions are actually reported.
We took a look at the specific reactions to see if there were any serious causes for concern, and this is what we found…
(We used the data shown in the UK Governments Analysis Print of the Pfizer vaccine {which you can find here} + Analysis Print of the Oxford Vaccine {which you can find here}.