From your link: "The blood clots, according to experts, are incredibly rare, appearing in one of every 250,000 receivers of the vaccine and causing only one death in a million AstraZeneca vaccine takers"
One death in a million. Compare that to roughly one death in 50 people who get the virus.
It's not the vaccine rather how it's improperly administered. If injected directly into the bloodstream it will increase chances of clotting. It could take awhile for the clotting to develop into more serious health issues, so much so that the health issue won't be linked to the vaccine injection.
Blood vessels in muscles are called capillaries and they are about 10 microns in diameter. That's 0.0004" or four ten thousandths of an inch. (https://www.britannica.com/science/capillary) That's about half the diameter of a human hair. Far too small for a vaccine needle to pierce because the needle is 50 times bigger.
Yeah, you're lost alright.
And you're still Mr. Anonymous Internet Poster with lots of opinions and no proof, spreading misinformation on the Internet.
I never liked my middle name growing up, if only my parents would have known what it would come to mean in the 90s...
Now THAT was funny! Thanks for the chuckle :-)
From your link: "The blood clots, according to experts, are incredibly rare, appearing in one of every 250,000 receivers of the vaccine and causing only one death in a million AstraZeneca vaccine takers"
One death in a million. Compare that to roughly one death in 50 people who get the virus.
It's not the vaccine rather how it's improperly administered. If injected directly into the bloodstream it will increase chances of clotting. It could take awhile for the clotting to develop into more serious health issues, so much so that the health issue won't be linked to the vaccine injection.
You are going to need to provide evidence that that happens.
When medication is to be delivered into the bloodstream it is commonly injected into a vein on the inside of the elbow. Unlike that, these vaccine are injected into the muscle of the upper arm because it's the best place for activating the immune system. https://theconversation.com/why-do-we-get-shots-in-the-arm-its-all-about-the-muscle-161259
Blood vessels in muscles are called capillaries and they are about 10 microns in diameter. That's 0.0004" or four ten thousandths of an inch. (https://www.britannica.com/science/capillary) That's about half the diameter of a human hair. Far too small for a vaccine needle to pierce because the needle is 50 times bigger.
And as I pointed out earlier your own link says "The blood clots, according to experts, are incredibly rare, appearing in one of every 250,000 receivers of the vaccine and causing only one death in a million AstraZeneca vaccine takers" https://www.google.com/amp/s/nationalpost.com/news/canada/adenovirus-in-astrazeneca-vaccine-behind-trigger-for-extremely-rare-blood-clots-scientists/wcm/b1d1e0df-8989-41b0-a029-875585bfb5ec/amp/
Are you really this stupid?