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Indian officials deny vaccine caused death

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India is undertaking what it is billing as the world's biggest coronavirus vaccination program.
Camera IconIndia is undertaking what it is billing as the world's biggest coronavirus vaccination program.

Indian officials have moved quickly to stamp out suggestions that the death of a government hospital employee was related to the COVID-19 vaccine he had received 24 hours earlier.

Mahipal Singh, 46, a ward attendant in the Moradabad district of the northern state of Uttar Pradesh died on Sunday after complaining of chest pain and breathlessness.

Relatives said he had been unwell before receiving the shot on Saturday but that his condition subsequently deteriorated.

District chief medical officer MC Garg said a post-mortem examination report released on Monday found Singh had died of a heart attack.

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"The report reveals the cause of death as cardiogenic and septicaemic shock. The death has no link with the coronavirus vaccination, all workers who got the vaccination are healthy and well," Garg said.

But Singh's son Vishal told reporters the family believed he had died from side-effects of the vaccine.

"He already had a bit of pneumonia, the usual cough and cold, but started feeling worse after returning home," he said.

India on Saturday began inoculating frontline workers in what they are billing as the world's biggest coronavirus vaccination program.

More than 224,000 people had received the shot by Sunday night, with 447 minimal adverse reactions, the Health Ministry said.

Of these, three were hospitalised, two of whom were quickly discharged.

India has the second largest coronavirus caseload after the US with a total of more than 10.5 million infections and 152,419 related deaths.

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