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  • 2021-08-12 (xsd:date)
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  • No evidence actor Mike Mitchell’s death was linked to his COVID-19 vaccine shot (en)
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  • Actor and former bodybuilder Mike Mitchell died July 23 from a heart attack in Turkey, a country that had begun offering COVID-19 vaccine booster shots a month earlier to health care workers and people over 50. Mitchell, who got the booster, was 65 years old. An Aug. 8 Instagram video suggests the third shot was to blame for Mitchell’s death. It highlights what appear to be Facebook posts Mitchell made following each of his three vaccine shots, dated Feb. 22, March 20 and July 16. The video then cuts to a July 24 headline announcing Mitchell’s death. Screenshots of the comments under some of Mitchell’s posts have also circulated online. One of them appears to show Mitchell responding to a commenter’s question by saying he received two shots of Sinovac-CoronaVac, the Chinese vaccine which the World Health Organization approved for emergency use in June, followed by the Pfizer-BioNTech shot. The Instagram post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook .) Mitchell’s Facebook page is now private, so we couldn’t verify whether the Facebook posts depicted in the video came from him. What the post fails to mention is that Mitchell had a history of heart issues. In 2007, Mitchell said he was forced to quit bodybuilding after he had five major heart operations. In his hometown newspaper in Scotland, Mitchell was quoted as saying his doctor warned him never to train again after his heart stopped for almost 10 minutes during one of these procedures. News reports from People and TMZ credited a representative for Mitchell as saying the cause of death was a heart attack. We reached out to his talent agency for details, but did not hear back. The post mirrors other social media claims falsely tying the vaccines to the deaths of celebrities, including ​​rapper DMX, baseball legend Hank Aaron and boxer Marvelous Marvin Hagler. Heart conditions and the vaccines As of Aug. 11, the federal Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System , or VAERS, lists 1,434 reports of myocardial infarctions, or heart attacks, occurring after vaccination in the U.S. The agencies that run VAERS caution that these reports alone are not enough to determine whether a vaccine causes a particular adverse event. Anyone can submit a report , and researchers use the reports to see whether an adverse event warrants further study. The CDC doesn’t consider heart attacks a serious adverse event of interest for the COVID-19 vaccines used in the U.S. Other heart conditions like myocarditis and pericarditis, are being studied as possible side effects of some vaccines, including Pfizer’s. The CDC says they’re occurring mostly in male adolescents and young adults. Myocarditis and pericarditis are conditions that inflame the heart or the membrane surrounding it. Either of these conditions can result in a heart attack. According to the CDC , most of the vaccinated patients with myocarditis and pericarditis who received care responded well to treatment and quickly recovered. Without access to Mitchell’s autopsy results, we can’t say what caused his heart attack. But we found no evidence that it was related to the vaccine. It’s important to remember that heart attacks occur all the time, vaccine or no vaccine, said Dr. Ira Taub, a pediatric cardiologist at Akron Children’s Hospital in Ohio. With over 160 million vaccinated Americans, it is inevitable that some will have a heart attack after vaccination. However, that’s very different than saying that the heart attack is caused by vaccination. The American Heart Association advises people with a history of cardiovascular risk factors, like heart attacks, to get vaccinated. This is because infection can be more severe for this population, and the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the potential risks. COVID-19 booster shots Mitchell lived in Turkey, which began vaccinating people in January with the Sinovac-CoronaVac shot, a vaccine the WHO only recently validated for emergency use. According to the WHO , a large phase 3 trial in Brazil found that two weeks after the second dose, the Sinovac-CoronaVac vaccine was 51% effective against symptomatic infection, and 100% effective against both severe infection and hospitalization. Turkey authorized the use of a third COVID-19 shot in June — and included Pfizer’s vaccine as an option — as the first people to get vaccinated got their shots roughly six months earlier, the Wall Street Journal reported . The CDC has not yet advised people in the U.S. on whether to receive a COVID-19 booster shot, but that may change soon . Our ruling An Instagram post suggests that Mitchell’s fatal heart attack was tied to his third COVID-19 shot. But there is no evidence linking his heart attack to the vaccine, and the post failed to mention that he had a history of heart conditions and surgeries. We rate this claim False. (en)
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