ByÂ
Health Minister Janez Poklukar announced use of J&J would be suspended while health authorities investigate potential connections between the use of the vaccine and the womanâs death as a result of a stroke.
Poklukar described the womanâs death as resulting from a âsuspected serious adverse eventâ at the Ljubljana University Medical Centre. In a statement, Poklukar described such incidences as extremely rare, encouraging the Slovenian public to get other vaccines while authorities investigate any connection between the death and the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
Use of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine has continued, even as reliable information indicates itâs more likely to have side effects on recipients than other vaccines manufactured by Pfizer and Moderna. Some individuals seeking vaccination take the Johnson vaccine because it only requires one injection, whereas other vaccines require two different injections several weeks apart.
Slovenia is one of several Central European nations to introduce vaccine passports in recent weeks, now requiring them for employees of the government. Coronavirus cases have increased in Central Europe, with citizens increasingly staging protests of vaccine mandates similar to those seen in Western Europe.
Slovenia had previously purchased 100,000 Johnson vaccines from Hungary to meet rising demand. The Astra-Zeneca vaccine had started off as the most popular in Europe, before concerns over efficacy led to the mass adoption of the American Pfizer vaccine as an alternative.
Support Big League Politics by making a donation today. You can also donate via PayPal, Venmo or donate crypto. Your support helps us take on the powerful and report the truth that the mainstream media wants to silence.