Categories: News

Dr Adham Baba: More research to be conducted on Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine following 23 deaths in Norway

The Ministry of Health (MOH) is updating its vaccination protocols following reports of 23 deaths among those aged 80 and above in Norway, following their first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine.

Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Adham Baba said the ministry is now collecting more data to take into consideration the age and health of the patients.

“With reference to reports released by the Norwegian Medicines Agency, the deaths were among the elderly and sickly with a history of chronic disease.

“Autopsies showed that the recipients of the vaccine suffered fever, purging and nausea which are normal adverse reactions after receiving immunisation.

“Following that, we are updating our vaccination information to take into account the person’s age and health history. The NRPA (National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency) is also getting detailed information from Pfizer (M) Sdn Bhd and monitoring what the European Medicines Agency are doing about the latest developments,” Dr Adham said in a statement today.

Health authorities in Norway have warned that COVID-19 vaccines may be too risky for those who are very old and frail and are adjusting its recommendations for vaccinating this group of people.

Norwegian Medicines Agency chief physician Sigurd Hortemo said in a statement yesterday that the common adverse reactions to the vaccines may have contributed to a fatal outcome in some frail patients.

Malaysia has finalised an agreement to purchase 12.8 million doses of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine, with an estimated first delivery date in the first quarter of this year.

The doses will be enough to vaccinate 6.4 million people, with the initial shipment of one million doses earmarked for 500,000 frontline health workers.

Dr Adham revealed today that Pfizer had already been conditionally registered on January 8 by the National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency (NRPA), adding that the ministry still feels the vaccine remains viable following third phase clinical trials which showed a 95 per cent efficiency.

“The COVID-19 COMIRNATY Concentrate For Dispersion For Injection vaccine by Pfizer-BioNTech has been granted conditional registration on January 8 by the NRPA. This to provide Malaysians access to the vaccine.

“The efficacy and safety trials conducted on 44,000 volunteers including those aged above 75 have shown a 95 per cent success rate when delivered in two doses within 21 days.

“Clinical research shows that the adverse effects are within the allowable perimeters and only temporary,” explained Dr Adham. ― Malay Mail

[ IMAGE SOURCE ]

Related reading

Recent Posts

Realme 16 and 16T Malaysia: Slim 7,000mAh and 8,000mAh battery smartphones, now available from RM1,299

Realme Malaysia has officially launched the Realme 16 and Realme 16T which focuses on long…

12 hours ago

JomCharge offers 50% discount for Solaris Mont Kiara EV chargers for this weekend only

JomCharge and DBKL officially announce their EV charger #21 located at Solaris Mont Kiara. The…

1 day ago

Malaysia EV registrations rise 21% in May 2026 despite overall car market decline of 11%

Malaysia's electric vehicle (EV) market continues to show growth in May 2026, with registrations growing…

1 day ago

Hyundai Ioniq 5 N and Ioniq 6 N launched in Malaysia with up to 641hp, from RM443,888

Hyundai Motor Malaysia has officially launched the Hyundai Ioniq 5 N and Hyundai Ioniq 6…

2 days ago

Proton e.MAS 7 Premium Plus delivers up to 450km WLTP, priced from RM119k

Pro-Net has officially unveiled the 3rd variant for Proton e.MAS 7 family at the ongoing…

2 days ago

Zeekr 009 Grand and Zeekr 9X now open for booking in Malaysia, priced from RM600,000

Zeekr Malaysia has revealed its two flagship models at KLIMS 2026, with the Zeekr 9X…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.