The CDC released a report on Feb. 19 showing that nearly 7,000 adverse reactions, including headaches and dizziness, were reported during the first month of the launch of the CCA virus (also known as the new coronavirus, COVID-19) vaccine in the United States.
The report, released by the CDC on Friday, 19, said nearly 13.8 million people received Pfizer and Modena’s COVID-19 vaccine in the first month of its launch in the U.S. between Dec. 14, 2020, and Jan. 13, 2021, with 6,354 people experiencing minimal adverse reactions, 640 people experiencing serious adverse reactions and 113 people died.
The report also showed that among the most frequent adverse reactions, 22% were headache, 17% were fatigue and 17% were dizziness.
Of the 6,994 people who had adverse reactions, 81% received the Pfizer vaccine and 19% received the Moderna vaccine. Adverse reactions increased especially with the second dose of Pfizer vaccine.
Of the 113 people who died, 78 were elderly people who lived in nursing homes year-round, while the remaining 35 were not living in nursing homes. In addition, 42 of these 113 people died in hospices or in a state of refusal to be resuscitated.
As for the cause of death, from the available death certificates of 17 patients, it was recorded that they died of heart disease, dementia, pneumonia or organ failure or other diseases.
The data also show that not many people developed allergies after vaccination, with only 4.5% of those vaccinated developing allergies.
The average age of the vaccine recipients was 42 years old, and of the 6,354 people who developed symptoms of adverse reactions, 5,505 were women, or more than 85 percent, while women accounted for 61 percent of the 13.8 million vaccine recipients in the first month, more than men.
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