Why is there no compensation for those who reacted to Covid jab?

The Coronavirus vaccine is incredibly safe but why is there no compensation for the unlucky few whose lives have been destroyed by the jab?

  • Richard Todman suffered catastrophic blood clots a week after the vaccine
  • The 60-year-old part time employment judge received the AstraZeneca jab
  • He suffered life-threatening blood clots in his bowel and was dead in three weeks

One week after his first dose of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine in March last year, the unthinkable happened to Richard Todman. The 60-year-old part-time employment judge from North London suffered catastrophic blood clots in his bowel. The condition can quickly become life-threatening, as the clots can break off and travel elsewhere in the body, stopping blood and nutrients from reaching vital organs. Within three weeks, Richard was dead.

A coroner’s report confirmed the cause: the jab triggered the clots that killed him. It must be said, such complications are vanishingly rare. Blood clots are thought to occur in just seven in every million vaccinated people, and out of 49 million Britons who have had two doses, the problem has contributed to just 24 deaths, according to data obtained from death certificates and recorded by the Office For National Statistics.

Yet it does happen. Today, Richard’s wife, barrister Deborah, is still struggling to come to terms with the impact of his sudden death.

One week after his first dose of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine in March last year, the unthinkable happened to Richard Todman, pictured with his wife Deborah. The 60-year-old part-time employment judge from North London suffered catastrophic blood clots in his bowel. The condition can quickly become life-threatening, as the clots can break off and travel elsewhere in the body, stopping blood and nutrients from reaching vital organs. Within three weeks, Richard was dead

Some patients have suffered adverse reactions to the Covid-19 vaccines, though billions have been inoculated without issue

‘He was a wonderful man who was the love of my life. We didn’t have children, so we spent our lives together travelling the world and having adventures. His death really was the worst thing that could have ever happened.’

Despite the heartbreak, Deborah acknowledges that Richard’s death was an anomaly. ‘Richard never hesitated to have the vaccine,’ she says. ‘As far as he was concerned, it was the right thing to do. He was very keen to have it to keep himself and others safe.’

His death certificate, seen by The Mail on Sunday, reads: ‘Richard Todman died from an extremely rare complication of the Covid-19 vaccine.’

Yet, according to Deborah, health chiefs have roundly failed to acknowledge that the Covid vaccine was to blame for her husband’s death.

A year on, she has yet to receive any financial support from the Department of Health – even though the Government’s vaccine damage payment scheme entitles families to a £120,000 payout if a loved one dies or is left significantly disabled as a result of a Government-recommended jab.

‘It’s not the money – of course it’s not the money,’ says Deborah, who has not felt able to return to work since Richard’s death. ‘But I resent the fact that the authorities are not saying, “We are so sorry your life is ruined because of this jab, here’s something to make life a tiny bit easier.”

‘Instead I’ve been told I must wait another six months so that they can look through my husband’s medical records to determine whether or not he died because of the AstraZeneca vaccine.’

And Deborah is not alone. The Mail on Sunday has heard from other families who have faced a lengthy fight to get authorities to acknowledge that life-changing injuries resulted from the jab – as well as compensation – despite medical proof.

Official figures revealed to us show that of 1,200 claims for compensation related to Covid-19 vaccines, not one has been paid.

The Mail on Sunday has long championed the Covid-19 vaccines, and reinforced that as well as being effective they are as safe as they can possibly be. Our position remains strong, as scientists now have more proof than ever before that this is indeed the case.

Another applicant still awaiting a decision on funding is 44-year-old Jamie Scott, an IT engineer from Warwickshire. The father-of-two suffered a brain haemorrhage the day after his first AstraZeneca jab in April last year and has been left with permanent brain damage. He is pictured here with his wife, Kate

More than 140 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine have now been administered in the UK. Yet the Government has received fewer than 500 reports of severe complications. Most of these are related to the AstraZeneca jab, which carries the highest risk of a blood clots, according to trials. It is important to note that these records are not corroborated by medical professionals, but are reported by the public as part of the Yellow Card Scheme which allows patients to report if they believe symptoms are related to a drug or vaccine.

Any medical intervention involves risks. Yet for the majority of those who have had any of the Covid-19 jabs the benefit has massively outweighed the extremely rare risks.

Professor Peter Openshaw, a vaccine expert at Imperial College London, says: ‘The majority of people who got the jab have benefited and are better protected from the disease.’

Even so, a very unlucky few exist.

Experts speaking to The Mail on Sunday have warned that the Government’s failure to properly address the ordeal faced by these families may encourage anti-vaccine conspiracy theorists’ warped views about the jab.

‘If you fail to be honest with the public about this and acknowledge what’s happened with families, you leave space for people to accuse the Government of covering up information about vaccines,’ says Professor Richard Goldberg, Chair in Law at Durham University and a medical law expert.

Many of the individuals who spoke to The Mail on Sunday remain champions of the vaccine effort and believe they made the right choice at the time. But they’ve become the unlucky few who, they say, have been fobbed off by health officials and MPs, despite many now being unable to work.

Last night, Conservative MP Sir Christopher Chope said: ‘Despite millions doing the right thing by being vaccinated against Covid-19, those who have suffered life-changing injuries or bereavement from the vaccines are being left behind. I hope the Government will do the right thing and provide these victims with the necessary financial help. That is far more than the current rate of £120,000’

Last night, Conservative MP Sir Christopher Chope said: ‘Despite millions doing the right thing by being vaccinated against Covid-19, those who have suffered life-changing injuries or bereavement from the vaccines are being left behind. I hope the Government will do the right thing and provide these victims with the necessary financial help. That is far more than the current rate of £120,000.’

Claire Hibbs, a 49-year-old construction officer from Hertfordshire, has not been able to work since getting an AstraZeneca vaccine in March 2021. Five days later the mother-of-two was fighting for her life in hospital with blood clots in her lungs and liver. Doctors told her they believed these clots were caused by the vaccine.

Scientists believe that the pathogen in the AstraZeneca vaccine that boosts our protection against the virus triggers malfunctioning blood vessels in a very small minority of cases. In April last year, UK vaccine chiefs took the cautious decision to stop use of the AstraZeneca jab in adults under 30, following a small number of reports across Europe of blood clots in young people who had received it.

The Government’s medicine authority, the MHRA, has received 79 reports of death following the AstraZeneca jab – although the link has been confirmed in only a third of these cases.

Claire says: ‘I remember a load of doctors suddenly swarming around me. It was terrifying. I didn’t think I’d make it through the night.’

An intensive course of anti-clotting drugs proved effective and Claire was discharged from hospital two weeks later.

Many of the individuals who spoke to The Mail on Sunday remain champions of the vaccine effort and believe they made the right choice at the time. But they’ve become the unlucky few who, they say, have been fobbed off by health officials and MPs, despite many now being unable to work

But the incident has left her in permanent pain and suffering with debilitating fatigue. ‘I applied in June for the vaccine damage payment scheme, but the solicitors told me not to hold out hope as I probably won’t qualify as being disabled enough,’ she says.

Another applicant still awaiting a decision on funding is 44-year-old Jamie Scott, an IT engineer from Warwickshire. The father-of-two suffered a brain haemorrhage the day after his first AstraZeneca jab in April last year and has been left with permanent brain damage.

Today he struggles with basic daily tasks and requires regular appointments with physiotherapists and neurologists to help regain full movement. He is partially blind, so no longer able to drive and struggles with attention and focus. Jamie’s medical records state that a rare adverse reaction to the AstraZeneca vaccine caused the blood clot on his brain, according to his wife, charity worker Kate, 33.

She says: ‘It is a miracle that Jamie is still with us. I called the hospital three times to say goodbye. But the doctors have said he may never work again.’

Kate applied for the vaccine damage payment scheme ten months ago but is yet to hear when a decision will be made.

The family wrote to Boris Johnson in August, explaining their ordeal. He responded, telling Jamie: ‘You are not a statistic, and must not be ignored. I am deeply touched by your story.’

‘It’s just words,’ says Kate. ‘I can’t go back to work, so we don’t have an income right now. Even if we do get the £120,000 payment, it’s not enough to keep us going for ever. And it’s insulting, considering what Jamie has been through.’

The families’ complaints have led legal experts to call for a shake-up of the vaccine damage payment scheme, which they say is outdated and ‘not fit for purpose’.

The scheme was set up in 1979 following years of campaigning by parent activist groups who believed the polio vaccine triggered brain damage in their children. Individuals who made a claim had their case assessed by Government health chiefs along with evidence from the patients’ doctors and coroners.

A one-off, tax-free payout of £10,000 was given if the Government-recommended vaccine was judged to have caused either death or left the claimant at least 60 per cent disabled, either mentally or physically. While the terms of eligibility have remained unchanged, the compensation amount has risen over the years, and in 2007 it reached the current level of £120,000.

But legal experts say that it still isn’t enough. ‘It will hardly cover loss of earnings and medical costs if someone is seriously disabled and unable to work,’ says Prof Goldberg.

Deborah Todman adds that if she were to sue for damages via the court system, she’d likely be awarded more money.

How rare is life-threatening reaction? 

David Beckham has been accused by a gay magazine of ‘keeping his money just about as far as possible from where his mouth is’ over his multi-million-pound deal to be the face of the Qatar World Cup.

Attitude magazine’s condemnation of the former England captain, who featured on its cover with blond dyed hair in 2002, was triggered by Beckham’s support for Blackpool footballer Jake Daniels, who came out as gay earlier this month.

Beckham said: ‘It’s a shame that when someone does come out that it’s such a strange thing. I’ve always felt that way about when someone does come out, it shouldn’t be. At the end of the day there will be a huge amount of gay people in sports, and why should they be any different from anyone else.’

But Attitude said Beckham’s comments were at odds with his decision to pocket a reported £10 million to be an ‘ambassador’ for the Qatari government, which bans homosexuality and severely restricts women’s rights.

‘When we speak about performative allyship, this is what we mean,’ it wrote on Instagram. ‘David Beckham continues to keep his money just about as far as possible from where his mouth is when it comes to the LGBTQ community.’

It added that when Beckham, 47, was asked by the Evening Standard newspaper about Jake Daniels, ‘he responded with the sort of hollow response that our community has become accustomed to expect from the mega rich’.

‘Beckham asks why gay people in sport should be any different to anyone else. One reason that David might consider is that in many places around the world queer people are not only marginalised and oppressed but also persecuted. One such place is Qatar, a country that he is about to become the face of.’

It added: ‘It’s time to demand more from our so-called allies.’

Beckham’s associates claim the former Manchester United star is satisfied that changes have been made in the Gulf state. But Attitude said: ‘Qatar is an extremely homophobic country where, under sharia law, men who have sexual relations with other men can be put to death. Other punishments include lifelong imprisonment and floggings.

‘In April, a Qatari security official warned fans planning to travel out for the World Cup that rainbow flags [supporting the LGBTQ community] could be confiscated. Fans had previously been told this wouldn’t be the case. Statements like David’s are more than hollow without any action to back them up.’

The Mail on Sunday revealed Beckham’s deal with Qatar last February, which sparked fury from critics, including the human rights pressure group Amnesty. It said at the time: ‘We would urge him to learn about the deeply concerning human rights situation in Qatar and be prepared to speak out about it.’

The FIFA World Cup runs from November 21 to December 18 and is the first held in the Arab world. It has been reported that more than 6,500 migrant workers, many helping to build the stadiums, have died in Qatar since it won the right to host the tournament ten years ago.

Beckham was widely praised for helping to tackle the stigma suffered by gay sportsmen and women by agreeing to appear on the cover of Attitude in 2002.

He is due to be in Qatar for the World Cup and has already made several trips there to raise the country’s profile.

 

The criteria of eligibility is another big problem. ‘Officials work on the basis of a big list of ailments that are said to determine disability, with some scoring higher than others,’ says Prof Goldberg.

‘For instance, the loss of a limb or seizures may determine you to be very disabled, but these are not necessarily problems that are relevant to the known side effects from the jab, like blood clots.

‘The scheme was designed for child vaccinations, but the Covid jab is given to adults so you may see different disabilities that don’t begin in childhood.’

Experts say another reason why few payouts are made is that it is often very difficult to prove that a particular side effect has resulted from the vaccine and would not have happened anyway.

Prof Goldberg says: ‘The problem is no one knows how the Department of Health is determining causation, because it does not make the cases – or the protocol – public.

‘I’d advocate for a system similar to the US, where individuals are allowed to negotiate the fee if there is a small doubt the jab caused the problem. In the UK, it’s faceless people saying yes or no, and patients are left in the dark as to why.’ In November, the responsibility for processing claims under the vaccine damage payment scheme was transferred to the NHS Business Services Authority (NHSBSA) – a strand of the health service than handles administration, staffing and prescription payments.

Deborah says this was a further barrier in getting her claim resolved. She explains: ‘The fact the cause of death now needs to be “investigated” by NHSBSA makes me furious. It means it is taking even longer to pay the money.’

Some families say they sought help on social media, only to be ‘silenced’ by the tech giants.

Tony Shingler, a 58-year-old security worker from Stoke-on-Trent, was paralysed by his first AstraZeneca shot and spent a year recovering in hospital. Doctors diagnosed him with a condition called Guillain-Barré syndrome, which causes numbness, weakness and pain in the feet, hands and limbs. It can also affect breathing. Individuals are ten times more likely to develop it as a complication of Covid-19 itself than they are after having the vaccine.

During his hospital admission, Tony’s daughter Natasha, 29, posted a picture of her father and a description of his condition on Facebook, in the hope of finding others in a similar position. But she was shocked when the post was removed within 24 hours. The social media company flagged it as ‘anti-vaccine messaging’, which was not permitted on the site.

BUT it wasn’t just social media that refused to engage with the family’s story. ‘I wrote to 40 MPs asking for support and not a single one responded,’ says Tony’s wife Nicola, 49. ‘No one would talk to us about what happened to Tony.’

Tony returned from hospital last week but will need months of rehabilitation to help him walk properly again, and surgery to fix bone injuries in his hands.

‘We were a perfectly happy family with little to worry about at the beginning of last year,’ says Nicola. ‘Now I find myself going back and forth to the job centre to claim Tony’s sick pay – we never imagined we’d ever be on benefits.’

Yet like all the families who spoke to us, Nicola says she would never discourage anyone from having a Covid jab.

‘We are well aware that Tony was one of the very unlucky ones,’ says Nicola. ‘All we ask for is for a little understanding and support. I don’t understand why the Government can’t help us out.’

In a statement, a spokesman for the vaccine damage payment scheme said: ‘We appreciate the continued patience of claimants at this time and understand their frustration at the speed of the process.

‘We’re continuing to progress claims as quickly as possible. An understanding of the potential relationship between Covid-19 vaccines and certain adverse events is still evolving.

‘It was vital we didn’t make assessments before the scientific evidence reached a more settled position, to avoid claims resulting in inconsistent outcomes or disadvantaging claimants.’

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