Woman Dies from Brain Hemorrhage in Japan Days after Vaccine, Link Uncertain

A Japanese a woman in her 60s died from a brain hemorrhage three days
after receiving a Pfizer coronavirus vaccination, the health ministry said on
Tuesday, adding that there may not be a link between the two.
The woman was vaccinated on Friday and is suspected to have suffered a
brain hemorrhage three days later, on Monday, it said. It was Japan’s first
reported death following a vaccination.
“The brain hemorrhage that is
suspected as a cause is relatively common among people from their 40s to their
60s, and at this time, based on examples overseas, there does not seem to be a
link between brain hemorrhages and the coronavirus vaccine,” the ministry
quoted Tomohiro Morio, a doctor advising the government, as saying.
“It may be a coincidental case, but
there is a need to gather more information and make an assessment in upcoming
working groups.”
Pfizer officials in Japan were not immediately available for comment.
Pfizer said in November the efficacy of its vaccine was consistent across age
and ethnic groups, and that there were no major side effects, a sign that the
immunization could be employed broadly around the world.
Global health authorities have praised the fast development of safe and
effective COVID vaccines, but have warned people with serious underlying health
conditions to take medical advice first.
Japan became the last member of the Group of Seven leading
industrialized nations to begin its vaccination drive, on Feb. 17.
It has so far received three shipments of vaccine developed by Pfizer
and BioNTech.
Japan officially approved Pfizer’s vaccine last month, the first such approval in the country as it steps up efforts to tame infections in the run-up to the Summer Olympics.