Covid-19 increase the risk of blood clots
Covid-19 increase the risk of blood clots by 8 times compared to vaccines, research shows the risk of blood clots in patients with the Verona virus-borne Covid-19 disease is eight times higher than the risk of a blood clot with the use of a vaccine, according to a medical study in the United Kingdom by Oxford University.
The study included more than 500,000 cod patients and found
that coronavirus patients were 100 times more likely to develop blood clots in
cod-infected patients than those who were protected by a covid virus. This is the
first major study to diagnose a dangerous type of blood clot in 39 patients
with S-code, 5 out of every 1 million people who use the AstraZeneca vaccine,
and 4 out of 4 people who use the Pfizer or modern vaccine.
The study found that such an effect was similar in all age
groups around the world and in patients with Covid-19. One-third of those who
suffered from blood clots were under 30 years of age Yasser Paul Harrison said
the results provide important information about the data, which was not widely
known.
He said there were concerns about a possible link between
vaccines and blood clots. And the use of certain vaccines is being restricted
or suspended in different countries, but the answer to an important question is
not known what is the risk of blood clots in patients with code 19. He said
that we have access to 2 facts.
The first fact was that Covid-19 greatly increased the risk
of blood clots and should be included in the list of problems with this
epidemic, while the second fact was that Covid-19 was more effective than Covid-19
vaccines.
"This is a fact
that must be taken into account in order to strike a balance between the benefits
and risks of vaccination," he said in a study on the diagnosis of Covid-19
or the first dose of a vaccine. Cases of blood clots were analyzed 2
weeks later. These results were compared with the incidence of blood clots in
flu patients and the rate of blood clots in the population was also taken into
account.
The study found that the risk of blood clots in cod patients
is 100 times higher than in a healthy person, while Covid-19 under 30 years
of age. Researchers emphasize that although the study was conducted under the
auspices of the University of Oxford, which developed the AstraZeneca vaccine,
it was independent.