It comes a day after Denmark became the first country in Europe to abandon the jab over links with very rare blood clots.
Norway should stop using
AstraZeneca's
COVID vaccine, says the country's public health institute.
It comes a day after Denmark became the first country in Europe to abandon the jab over links with very rare blood clots.
Both the World Health Organization and the European Medicines Agency have said the benefits of the
vaccine outweigh its risks.
"There is now significantly more knowledge about the connection between the
AstraZeneca vaccine and the rare and serious incidents of low platelets, blood clots and bleeding than when Norway chose to put further use of the
AstraZeneca vaccine on pause in March," said Geir Bukholm, director of infection control at Norway's National Institute of Public Health.
"Based on this knowledge, we have arrived at a recommendation that the
AstraZeneca vaccine be removed from the coronary vaccination programme in Norway."
On March 11, authorities had suspended the rollout of the
vaccine after a small number of people who had received the jab were hospitalised with a combination of blood clots and a low count of platelets, with three cases proving fatal.
Bukholm said that now, with "significantly more knowledge" about the connection between the
AstraZeneca vaccine and rare incidents of blood clotting and low platelets, Norway should cease use of the
vaccine.
The institute estimated that pulling distribution of the
AstraZeneca jab would likely bring about a delay in overall
vaccine rollout by two weeks.
Bukholm said that it had not been easy to come to that recommendation. However, he suggested he believe it was a necessary step.
Those who have already received the first dose of the
AstraZeneca vaccine are expected to be offered another
coronavirus jab as their second dose.
However, the country's public health institute said it would be offering more information on the specifics of the programme in the coming days.