California
Woman Who Got Both Moderna Vaccine Shots Dies of COVID-19: Officials
June 11, 2021
An elderly woman in Napa County, California, who had received both Moderna
vaccine shots died from COVID-19, county
health officials said.
While scant
details about the woman were released, Napa County spokeswoman Leah
Greenbaum said she was over the age of 65 and had underlying health problems.
The woman died on June 2 after a long hospital stay, Greenbaum said on June 7.
Officials
said she tested positive for the B.1.1.7 variant of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus.
The World Health Organization has recently started calling the variant “Alpha,”
saying it was first detected in the UK.
“No vaccine
is 100 [percent] effective, but this does not diminish the urgency and
importance of getting vaccinated, especially as more variant strains emerge,”
Napa County Public Health Officer Dr. Karen Relucio said in a statement about
the woman’s death. Despite the fatality, COVID-19 vaccines “provide
exceptional protection against death and illness,” Relucio added.
The
officials added that the woman’s death suggests more people need to get
vaccinated.
“Getting vaccinated helps protect us, and it helps protect vulnerable
people who aren’t able to mount that immune response,” Greenbaum said in the
news conference.
The Epoch
Times has contacted Moderna for comment.
Meanwhile, a
man who got both COVID-19 AstraZeneca vaccine doses died of the virus on
Thursday, according to officials in Seychelles.
Jude Gedeon,
the island nation’s public health commissioner, said during a news conference that
the 54-year-old man was the first person to have received the vaccine to die of
COVID-19.
It’s not
clear when the man had received the vaccine or whether AstraZeneca is
investigating the matter. The Epoch Times has contacted AstraZeneca for
comment.
Officials
have said Seychelles, an archipelago nation in the Indian Ocean that relies
heavily on European tourism, is the most vaccinated country in the world.
However, recent reports have indicated that despite the high vaccination rate,
there has been a spike in COVID-19 cases.
“Unfortunately
the downward trend that we saw from mid-May seems to have stabilized and it is
not going further down,” Gedeon said during the Thursday news conference.
“Community transmission is continuing,” he continued to say, adding that the
government might force to implement more lockdowns.
Seychelles
has used Sinopharm’s vaccine and Covishield, a version of the AstraZeneca
vaccine. And recently, the country began using the Russian Sputnik V shot,
according to authorities.
World Health
Organization officials in March warned they have “very low confidence” in some
data that was provided by Sinopharm, a CCP-backed state-run pharmaceutical
company. “We are very confident that 2 doses of BBIBP-CorV are efficacious
in preventing PCR confirmed COVID19 in adults (18–59 years),” said a WHO
document, according to Reuters.
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