Although federal authorities recommend that March “pause” the administration of the vaccine against the coronavirus developed by Johnson & Johnson, the Dallas county decided to suspend its program for this day at its mayor’s evacuation center.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are holding the March that institutes investigating thrombi detected and six women were evacuated at Johnson & Johnson doses.
The judge of the Dallas county, Clay Jenkins, announced that he would not use the Johnson and Johnson dose in the April 13 evacuation program in the Fair Park campuses. “We have a J&J holiday schedule at Fair Park waiting for the secondary effects detected in other locations, we will be able to use CDC and FDA exams as soon as possible,” Jenkins said in a statement on Tuesday.
Jenkins said the evacuation day would take place on a regular basis in Fair Park, with 1,500 doses of the modern vaccine being used to continue evacuating with a dose of Pfizer. For this reason, the Fair Park shopping center will open from 9 am
In the United States he has administered more than 6.8 million doses of the J&J vaccine, which is a single application.
Today we would give J&J @fairpark due to adverse side effects elsewhere, however, we will no longer use them @CDCgov @US_FDA investigates security issues. Today we open at 09:00 and start the day with 1500 @moderna_tx then switch to @pfizer thaw once.
– Clay Jenkins (@JudgeClayJ) 13 April 2021
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