City
Epaper

Covid vax didn't raise risk of unexplained sudden deaths in young Indians: ICMR study

By IANS | Updated: November 21, 2023 11:20 IST

New Delhi, Nov 21 Covid-19 vaccination did not increase the risk of unexplained sudden deaths among young adults ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Nov 21 Covid-19 vaccination did not increase the risk of unexplained sudden deaths among young adults in India, concluded comprehensive study by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) on Tuesday.

The research, published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research, showed that lifestyle factors such as current smoking status, alcohol use frequency, recent binge drinking, recreational drug/substance use and vigorous-intensity activity were associated with unexplained sudden death.

As compared to never users, the more the frequency of alcohol use, the higher was the odds for unexplained sudden death.

The research body undertook a multicentric matched case–control study in view of anecdotal reports of sudden unexplained deaths in India’s apparently healthy young adults, linking to Covid-19 infection or vaccination.

The researchers determined the factors associated with such deaths in individuals aged 18-45 years from 47 tertiary care hospitals across India.

At least 729 cases and 2,916 controls were included in the analysis.

The cases were apparently healthy individuals without any known co-morbidity, who suddenly (before 24 h of hospitalisation or seen apparently healthy 24 h before death) died of unexplained causes between October 1, 2021 and March 31, 2023.

"Covid-19 vaccination did not increase the risk of unexplained sudden death among young adults in India," revealed the researchers.

Instead "past Covid-19 hospitalisation, family history of sudden death and certain lifestyle behaviours increased the likelihood of unexplained sudden death", they added in the paper.

The study also showed that taking at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine lowered the oddsfor unexplained sudden death.

Patients with unexplained sudden death were four times more likely to have had been hospitalised for Covid.

"Our findings did not indicate any evidence of positive association of unexplained sudden death with Covid-19 vaccination. However, a history of sudden death in the family, Covid-19 hospitalisation and certain high risk behavioural factors were positively associated with unexplained sudden death among young Indians," the researchers said.

"On the contrary, the present study documents that Covid-19 vaccination indeed reduced the risk of unexplained sudden death in this age group."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalYouth arrested in Rajasthan for sharing 'anti-national' content on social media

MumbaiMumbai Horror: Man Molests Eight-Year-Old Girl, Shows Obscene Videos on Pretext of Giving Pizza In Tardeo

BusinessOther countries see merit in India's rural governance models at World Bank meet

InternationalPIB Fact Check debunks China Daily's report of Indian jet crash, calls it "Chinese propaganda campaign"

EntertainmentVijay Deverakonda channels his inner warrior in the first look of 'VD14'

National Realted Stories

NationalOur armed forces ready to deal with any situation: J&K LG

NationalOmar Abdullah lauds armed forces for swift response to cross-border aggression

National26/11: Tahawwur Rana sent to jail till June 6 as NIA questioning ends

NationalIndian Railways Launches Special Trains from Udhampur, Jammu to Delhi Amid Rising Tensions Post Operation Sindoor

NationalPresident Murmu postpones Sabarimala visit amid India-Pakistan tensions