While waiting for the final decision on the controversial vaccine, Norway has decided to distribute its stock of Astra-Zeneca to fellow Nordic countries that actually want to use them despite the associated risks.

Norwegians run a greater risk of dying from being inoculated with Astra-Zeneca’s vaccine than from Covid-19, the National Institute of Public Health (FHI) concluded in its analysis.

The FHI is not recommending the British vaccine, previously linked to serious complications in the form of rare blood clotting and hemorrhage amid low platelet counts.

Abstaining from the vaccine could possibly prevent up to 10 deaths related to side effects, the FHI said, according to the newspaper Verdens Gang.

So far, Norway has seen five cases of serious incidents reported shortly after vaccination, with three fatalities. FHI has calculated the mortality rate from the Astra-Zeneca vaccine as 2.3 people per 100,000 vaccinated.

An extensive Los Angeles Times report Thursday shone light on the allegedly toxic culture among the USC Song Girls, perpetrated by former coach Lori Nelson. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The FHI stressed that continuing to inoculate will by contrast expose younger women to an “unreasonably high risk”, given the current relatively levels of infection in Norway.

Furthermore, the institute is against offering the vaccine on a voluntary basis, which has been proposed both in Norway and fellow Scandinavian nations.

We believe that such an alternative may appear unethical and with a high risk that those who make such a choice have not fully understood the risk to which they are exposed,” the institute said.

The FHI also ventured that recommending the Astra-Zeneca vaccine for further use could lead to lower confidence among the population in vaccination programs in general.

This could lead to a lower vaccination rate and vaccination rate in the long run, and that patients in risk groups will also say no to deadly vaccines.

However, the government believes it is too early to discontinue the vaccine completely, and is instead launching a new expert group to further investigate both Astra-Zeneca and Johnson & Johnson, which triggered similar concerns.

Pending a final decision, however, Norway has decided to distribute its stock of AstraZeneca to fellow Nordic countries that actually want to use them. Of the Norwegian stock, Sweden will borrow 200,000, while 16,000 will go to Iceland.

The Swedish Public Health Agency has made a different assessment of the Astra-Zeneca vaccine and has concluded that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the risks and the side effects.

Earlier this spring, dozens of countries temporarily stopped the use of the AstraZeneca shot amid reports of side effects. Of them, many, like Sweden, have since resumed inoculation, citing a precarious infection situation and shortages of other vaccines.

Sputnik / ABC Flash Point News 2021.

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Walter Russel
Walter Russel
Member
23-04-21 14:28

There’s no Covid-19 Virus, much less a deadly one. What is a “Virus”? Higher? No – GUARANTEED. They the “vaccines” were specifically designed to KILL. Genocide Euthanasia Georgia Guidestones. Kissinger Buffet Gates Zuckerberg Soros Rothschild … CFR RAND UNO WORLD BANK WEF NATO Bilderberg Trilateral etc.

Eddy G
Eddy G
Member
Reply to  Walter Russel
23-04-21 14:29

Walter Russel, as the weather warms, the Pfizer vaccine becomes dangerous because it is very difficult to maintain at -70 in urban transport and we have to wait for worse news.

Anne00Marie
Anne00Marie
Member
23-04-21 14:30

Nice that Norway thinks of it’s people, and not VacciNazi profits. Wish our Government thought along the same lines, over in the UK.