Vaccination site in Colorado closes early after reactions to Johnson & Johnson vaccination

A vaccination site in Colorado closed early Wednesday after a “limited number of people” began receiving adverse reactions to the Johnson and Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, which sent hundreds of people waiting in line for hours sent home is without getting a shot.

The site at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City, eight miles northeast of Denver, closed about 90 minutes early at 3:30 p.m., FOX Denver 31 reported. More than 1,700 people received vaccine shots at the site Wednesday.

“After the administration of the J&J vaccine and during on-site observation, we saw a limited number of side reactions to the vaccine,” reads a statement from Fox News about Centra Health, which manages the site. “We followed our protocols and, with an abundance of warning, made the decision – in partnership with the state – to interrupt the rest of the day.”

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Messages to Johnson and Johnson were not immediately returned.

About 640 who were standing in line for a shot were sent home and their slots were scheduled for Sunday, Centra Health said.

The company did not say how many people had reactions, but said it amounted to 0.8% of those who received a vaccine dose on Wednesday. It did not specify what kind of reactions people had.

Reactions to COVID-19 vaccines have been reported, some of which are serious. A man in Virginia recently recovered from a hospital stay after having a skin reaction to what doctors believe of a Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

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A recent manufacturing error resulted in millions of Johnson & Johnson vaccines being discarded. A mix at Emergent BioSolutions, a manufacturing facility in Baltimore, prompted the Food and Drug Administration to delay the vaccines.

About 15 million doses have been destroyed.

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