Covid-19
How AstraZeneca vaccine killed BBC Presenter – Coroner
A coroner, Karem Dilks, has concluded an inquest with the submission that AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine killed a BBC staff member in Newcastle, United Kingdom (UK), who died three weeks after the first dose.
National Daily gathered that the inquest revealed that the BBC Radio Presenter, Lisa Shaw, died of complications from the AstraZeneca coronavirus jab. The Radio Presenter with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Lisa Shaw, died on May 23, three weeks after receiving her first AstraZeneca vaccine dose, thereafter, there was an order for an investigation into the cause of her death.

National Daily further gathered that “the coroner in Newcastle, Karem Dilks, was on Thursday told that Shaw, 44, died at the Royal Victoria Infirmary (RVI), a little more than three weeks after her first dose.”
The coroner was told in an inquest of less than an hour that Lisa Shaw “was admitted to hospital after she complained of headaches and doctors found a haemorrhage on her brain.”
The BBC had reported that a consultant in Anaesthetics and Intensive Care at the RVI, Dr. Christopher Johnson, disclosed that doctors were in a daily conference with a national panel about vaccine-induced thrombotic thromobocytopenia; this was identified as “the condition Ms Shaw was believed to be suffering from.” And when asked if he would have changed the treatments given to Shaw, Dr. Johnson said “No.”
The medical expert maintained that guidelines on how to treat the condition, which were published by The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in July, matched the treatment given to Shaw. This is an indication that the doctors complied with professional rules.
There have been several reports of adverse effects of diverse coronavirus vaccines administered to citizens of various countries across the world, governments have continued to impose vaccines on people, coercively enforcing vaccine passports and vaccine mandates.
Experts have, however, argued that “while a link has been established between the AstraZeneca vaccine and potentially fatal blood clots, this side effect is rare. It is thought to affect about 1 in 50,000 people who receive the jab.”
The Medicine and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency had also argued that the advantages of the vaccine outweigh the risks for most age groups.
Scientists have countered the argument, insisting that “the risk of brain clots as a result of COVID-19 infection is markedly higher than from vaccines.”
The family of Lisa Shaw had in a statement after the inquest hearing, declaring: “this is another difficult day in what has been a devastating time for us.
“The death of our beloved Lisa has left a terrible void in our family and in our lives.
“She truly was the most wonderful wife, mum, daughter, sister and friend.”
It was highlighted that Shaw was an established radio personality in the northeast. She worked as a co-presenter of a breakfast show alongside Gary Philipson for Century Radio, before she joined BBC radio, Newcastle, in 2016.
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