Mar 19 • 15:51 UTC 🇮🇸 Iceland Visir

Recorded vaccine as the cause of death without evidence

A doctor falsely listed COVID-19 vaccinations as the cause of death for four nursing home residents, later admitting there was no evidence to support this claim.

A doctor has come under scrutiny for recording COVID-19 vaccinations as the cause of death for four residents of a nursing home in 2023, with the deaths occurring between five to fifteen days post-vaccination. This anomaly was highlighted after the national health authority requested independent specialists to examine the circumstances surrounding these deaths. Following an investigation, the death certificates were amended, acknowledging that the vaccine was not the cause of death, which raised concerns about the accuracy of vaccine-related death reporting.

Upon investigation, it was revealed that the doctor involved had no substantiating evidence for the claims made in the death certificates. All four individuals had multiple chronic diseases and were on various medications at the time of their passing. It marked a significant inquiry as these cases were the first instances where a vaccine was used as a presumed cause of death since the establishment of a specific death coding register in Iceland, alluding to potential inconsistencies within the medical reporting system regarding vaccine safety.

This incident sparks broader questions about vaccine hesitancy and misinformation surrounding COVID-19 vaccinations. As vaccinations have been pivotal in managing the pandemic, accurate data regarding their safety and side effects is crucial. The review of such cases underscores the need for stringent oversight in medical documentation to ensure that public health messaging remains clear and based on factual evidence, thereby helping to maintain trust in vaccination efforts within the community.

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