Third case of death in Hong Kong after vaccination with China Kexing vaccine

On March 8, there was a third case of death in Hong Kong from the injection of the Chinese Kexing vaccine. The picture shows the Kexing vaccine.

On March 8, there was a third case of death in Hong Kong from the injection of Chinese Kexing vaccine. The case was previously in good health.

Radio Television Hong Kong (RTHK), Hong Kong’s Apple Daily and other Hong Kong media reported that a 71-year-old man who went to a private clinic on March 3 to receive the China Coxin vaccine became seriously ill on the evening of March 7 (Sunday) and was taken by ambulance to the emergency room of United Christian Hospital, where he died.

Radio Television Hong Kong said the man died in the early hours of today (8). Apple Daily reports that the man was taken to the hospital in the evening of March 7 and died after only about an hour of resuscitation. The man had no allergy symptoms when he was admitted to the hospital and had been in good health.

This is the third death in Hong Kong since the start of the vaccination program in China on Feb. 26, when the first vaccination death occurred in Hong Kong on Feb. 28 in a 63-year-old man who received the vaccine on Feb. 26. Later, a 55-year-old woman who was vaccinated on March 2 became unwell on March 5 and died on the same day.

In addition to the reported deaths, two other elderly people recently became unwell after receiving the vaccine in China. An 80-year-old man who received the Coxin vaccine on March 1 at the Community Vaccination Center at Tianhui Road Gymnasium in Yuen Long developed chest pain on March 6 and was transferred to an intensive care unit in critical condition that night. The man has a history of diabetes, carotid Atherosclerosis, hypertension, stroke and other chronic diseases.

Another 72-year-old woman received the Kexing vaccine on March 6 at the Tseung Kwan O Gymnasium Community Vaccination Center and immediately developed physical weakness. The woman suffers from chronic diseases such as diabetes, hyperlipidemia, hypertension and underactive thyroid.