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S. Korea acknowledges 1st death after vaccination

June 21, 2021 - 16:16 By Yonhap
Shown in the photo taken on Monday, is an LED sign at a vaccination center in northeastern Seoul. (Yonhap)
South Korea's health authorities on Monday acknowledged the country's first death after vaccination as a man died last week of a rare case of blood clotting after receiving the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine.

The man in his 30s, who died Wednesday, was confirmed to have the very rare but serious side effect, called thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS), following inoculation on May 27.  

The patient showed symptoms of a severe headache and nausea nine days after receiving the vaccine shot, and was later admitted to a hospital and diagnosed with the syndrome Tuesday.

South Korea has been offering AstraZeneca's vaccine to only those aged 30 and above since mid-April amid concerns over blood clotting.

It is the first time for the government to acknowledge a vaccine-linked death after the country rolled out the inoculation program in late February.

Health authorities have been investigating 224 cases of deaths with potential links to COVID-19 vaccines so far.

Of the suspected cases, the country ruled that 210 of them were not caused by shots, while 13 cases needed more investigation.

South Korea has completed vaccinations of around 7.9 percent of the nation's population, with 29.2 percent receiving at least one shot.

The country currently administers three different vaccines, namely AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Janssen. (Yonhap)