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People in Republican-voting states more likely to report Covid-19 vaccine side effects, study says

The inescapable conclusion is that people in Democrat-voting states are more likely to conceal vaccine side-effects. – HEADLINE HEALTH

STAT NEWS – People in Republican-voting states were more likely to report adverse events after receiving a Covid-19 vaccination than people living in Democratic-leaning states, a new analysis finds, suggesting that how people view their post-vaccine side effects or decide whether to report them may be shaped by their political views.

The cross-sectional study, published Friday in JAMA Network Open, looked at more than 620,000 entries in the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System from 2020 through 2022.

The study found that a 10% increase in ballots cast for a Republican in the last presidential election was associated with a 5% increase in the odds that an adverse event after Covid vaccination would be reported, a 25% increase in odds that a severe adverse event would be reported, and a 21% increase in the odds that any reported adverse event would be severe.

“It’s all part of this incredible polarization that’s politically charged,” Eric Topol, founder and director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute, told STAT.

He was not involved in the study. “The fact that they’re reporting a significant increase in states that are Republican is just consistent with everything we’ve seen in the pandemic.”

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In the grim calculus of Covid-19 deaths, there is already a well known red-blue state divide among Americans. More people died in states where more voters registered as Republicans, voted that way, and elected members of the Republican party.

Counties in Donald Trump’s column in 2020 were much less likely to get Covid vaccinations than counties that voted for President Biden.

VAERS is a surveillance system created by the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that allows patients, doctors, and vaccine manufacturers to voluntarily report symptoms that occur after vaccination.

That’s a weakness for establishing cause and effect, but it’s a strength for gauging people’s attitudes about their experience, David Asch, lead author of the new paper, told STAT …

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