After more than three billion doses, the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid vaccine is being withdrawn. AstraZeneca said it was "incredibly proud" of the vaccine, but it had made a commercial decision.
The shot is no longer being manufactured or supplied, and it is no longer authorized for use in Europe. By Rebecca Robbins AstraZeneca has started to pull its Covid-19 vaccine from global markets ...
AstraZeneca says it is withdrawing Vaxzevria, its vaccine to protect against COVID-19, from global markets. The vaccine was used early on in the pandemic in many countries, including Canada.
The Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid vaccine is being withdrawn worldwide, months after the pharmaceutical giant admitted for the first time in court documents that it can cause a rare and dangerous side ...
, opens new tab said on Tuesday it had initiated the worldwide withdrawal of its COVID-19 vaccine due to a "surplus of available updated vaccines" since the pandemic. The company also said it ...
In short: Pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca has started a global withdrawal of its COVID-19 vaccine, Vaxzevria, which has not been available in Australia since March 2023. A surplus of "available ...
The Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid vaccine is being withdrawn worldwide, months after the pharmaceutical giant admitted for the first time in court documents that it can cause a rare and dangerous side ...
With every national scandal you can trace the people who stood up first and said 'this is wrong'. Gareth Eve was one. When he lost his wife Lisa, who died due to complications from the AstraZeneca ...
Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. FILE - Medical staff prepares an AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine during preparations at the vaccine center ...
AstraZeneca is withdrawing its COVID-19 vaccine from the market because of low demand, the drugmaker said Wednesday. The shot, which was never authorized in the U.S., was widely used across the ...
Our focus is to create a vaccine that will protect us against the next coronavirus pandemic, and have it ready before the pandemic has even started.
A 'triple threat' of surging flu, Covid and respiratory syncytial virus detections across New South Wales has prompted health authorities to issue a warning.