AstraZeneca Covid vax could be added to death certificate of psychologist who died from a blood clot 10 days after receiving jab

Mrs. Wright said the fact that she now had "written proof" that AstraZeneca played a part in Stephen's death would allow her and her family to ramp up their legal fight against the pharmaceutical giant.

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Jarryd Jaeger Vancouver, BC
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An inquest into the death of 32-year-old British psychologist Dr. Stephen Wright has determined that he passed away due to "unintended complications of the [Covid-19] vaccine." His wife, Charlotte, has been on a mission to change his official cause of death from "natural causes" to reflect the findings.

Dr. Stephen Wright died in January 2021 after being diagnosed with a blood clot in his brain. He'd received his first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine just ten days prior.



According to the BBC, senior coroner Andrew Harris said in his decision that it was "very important to record as fact that it is the AstraZeneca vaccine," but noted that "that is different from blaming AstraZeneca."

He went on to state that given the circumstances, there was "not an action one can take at the moment."

Mrs. Wright celebrated Harris' ruling, saying the fact that she now had "written proof" that AstraZeneca played a part in Stephen's death would allow her and her family to ramp up their legal fight against the pharmaceutical giant.

"It was made clear that Stephen was [previously] fit and healthy and that his death was by vaccination of AstraZeneca," she stated.

In an interview with BBC4, Mrs. Wright explained that when her husband died, people questioned whether it was actually from the vaccine. "Even with people in my life, there were questions and queries about whether I was actually telling the truth," she lamented, "so, two years later, I can finally say it is the truth."

"It provides relief but it doesn't provide closure," she added. "I think we're only going to get that when we have an answer from AstraZeneca and the government."

AstraZeneca, for its part, said via a spokesperson that it was "very saddened by Stephen Wright's death," but maintained that "the benefits of vaccination outweigh the risks of extremely rare potential side effects."
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