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AstraZeneca Victim Lashes Out at “Woefully Inadequate” Compensation

by Richard Eldred
19 May 2024 3:00 PM

The Mail carries the harrowing story of a mother-of-three struggling to get by on the state support given to her after being left paralysed and forced to medically retire from work following the AstraZeneca Covid jab. Here’s an excerpt:

Like tens of thousands of Brits, Clare Bowie’s life was turned upside down during the Covid pandemic.

But the 56 year-old from Dumbarton near Glasgow wasn’t left struggling for her life from the virus.

Instead, she was paralysed from the chest down after getting the AstraZeneca Covid vaccination in April 2021.

The mum-of-three worked as an admin officer at a submarine base for the ministry of defence for 37 years before she was forced to medically retire due to losing mobility in her hands.

However, Mrs. Bowie’s frustration lies with the “woefully inadequate” Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme, which doesn’t cover the cost of her mortgage or the cost of modifying her home for her level of disability. …

Initially doctors thought Mrs. Bowie had Guillian-Barre syndrome, which is a very rare and serious condition which affects the nerves that has been linked to complications with the first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine.    

But after six MRI scans at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Glasgow, doctors diagnosed acute disseminated encephalitis complicated by transverse myelitis (ADEM), a condition that causes inflammation in the brain and spinal cord. …

Medics never had any doubts that her paralysis was caused by the vaccine.  

Mrs. Bowie… recalls the consultant introducing himself and told her straight away: “I think it is Guillian-Barre syndrome and it’s because you took the vaccine.”

“I actually argued with him,” Mrs. Bowie said. “I couldn’t really believe it could be the vaccine.

“He said it is 100% the vaccine. He was absolutely definite on it and I am very grateful for that because I am assuming that’s why I got the vaccine damage payment.”

The Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme, which has been around since the 1970s, offers people, or their families, a tax-free sum of £120,000. …

Mrs. Bowie’s husband, Dave, 55, applied for the scheme in October 2021, while she was still in hospital. But the money wasn’t in her account until February 2023, a year and half after applying.

“It did take a while and you don’t really hear from them,” she said. 

But after going through the process of applying to the Government scheme, Mrs. Bowie says it is “woefully inadequate” and “traumatic for people”. 

She said: “You think £120,000 is massive. I have been in the civil service all my life, I wasn’t used to that money. But the bottom line is it doesn’t clear your mortgage and modify your house.”

In 1979, the scheme handed out £10,000 to people injured or killed by vaccines, this amount has been raised several times, but the current level (£120,000) was set in 2007. 

But according to the Bank of England inflation calculator that is the equivalent of £195,183 meaning people are now losing out on about £75,000 in cash. 

She said: “They go right back through your medical records. I’ve spoken to people who have been denied it because 10 years ago something happened to them. But I have been lucky and been a very healthy person so they can’t pinpoint it on anything else.”

Strict eligibility criteria means those affected must either have been killed or be left 60% disabled due to a vaccine.

This means a person theoretically judged to be only 59% disabled will not get a penny.

Worth reading in full.

Tags: AstraZenecaCompensationCovid VaccinesNHSVaccine HarmsVDPS

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6 Comments
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transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago

Isn’t “stakeholder democracy” something of an oxymoron? Seems like code for “experts who know best will decide”.

11
0
JXB
JXB
1 year ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

Stakeholders, unlike share holders, have invested nothing so have nothing to lose when things go tits-up.

12
0
RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  JXB

The idea is that stakeholders, unlike share holders, are the one’s who’ll be directly affected by decisions and that’s why they should all get together to make such decisions in a way that’s sensible for all of them (or the best possible compromise which can be achieved). Share holders have no direct reason to care for the outcome of any particular decision, just for the indirect effect of share price changes.

1
0
JXB
JXB
1 year ago

Government… Budget Responsibility. Side-splitting laughter is heard around the parish.

Central economic planning and control aka fiscal policies = root of Socialism and Fascism. In the former the State owns the means of production, in the latter the State directs the means of production giving the appearance of private ownership in a free economy.

The technocratic aspects plants it in the Fascist economic model.

The Industrial Revolution occurred because there were no fiscal policies, had there been we would all still be working on the land, as soon we shall be as Net Zero progresses.

(The primary means of production is the Human Being.)

Last edited 1 year ago by JXB
11
0
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
1 year ago

Off-T

Paula Jardine at TCW with her thoughts on the next Scamdemic.

https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/big-pharma-is-the-lottery-winner-in-the-great-bird-flu-myth/

“So which strain of bird flu do you have on your bingo card for the pandemic flu mark 2 public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) this coming winter? The UK government has just signed a pandemic preparedness deal with CSL-Seqirus, the vaccine company now running the old Chiron factory in Speke, to supply 100 million doses of an unidentified flu vaccine in the event of a pandemic. But I can see another switcheroo coming. My money is on an outbreak of H9N7, the other influenza strain in Moderna’s new mRNA-1018 vaccine.”

Last edited 1 year ago by huxleypiggles
3
0
RW
RW
1 year ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

‘The mRNA technology allows us to be much more agile in developing vaccines; we can start creating a mRNA vaccine within hours of sequencing a new viral strain with pandemic potential,’ said Dr Hensley. ‘During previous influenza pandemics, like the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, vaccines were difficult to manufacture and did not become available until after the initial pandemic waves subsided.’

Read: Nobody needs this shit and pandemic waves have so-far always subsided without it. But thanks to mRNA technology, we’ll be to market quickly enough in future to avoid this!

Deborah Birx is also again making noises about “avoiding the mistakes made with COVID”, start mass testing of healthy people now and stop requiring symptoms for diagnosis in favour of using PCR test results instead. Deborah Birx would seem to be one of the mistakes made with COVID. After all, she admitted to tricking the Trump administations into principally endless lockdowns by lying about her true intentions.

3
0
ChrisA
ChrisA
1 year ago

Aren’t they just establishing a costing oversight which will simply state that every Labour plan will bankrupt the nation? Net Zero is going to bankrupt every Western Nation that wants to die by just aiming for it.

2
0
EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
1 year ago

it would be simpler to go back to rotten boroughs and University MPs.

Last edited 1 year ago by EppingBlogger
5
0
JXB
JXB
1 year ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

And back then MPs got no pay or expenses. Voluntary contributions from constituents defrayed some of their costs, and the size of contribution was linked to how well constituents thought their MP was serving their interests.

We should go back to that.

3
0
NeilParkin
NeilParkin
1 year ago

Can we have Budget Accountability instead.? That thing that if you don’t spend wisely, we have the means to fire you..?

5
0
JXB
JXB
1 year ago
Reply to  NeilParkin

Fire you and fine you, say, 50% of the cost to the public purse.

1
0
stewart
stewart
1 year ago

I am in favour of a fiscal lock.

A fiscal lock that doesn’t allow a government to spend more than it collects or better still one that puts a hard limit, like maximum 10% income tax.

But this isn’t a fiscal lock. It’s a shift of power from parliament to bureaucrats.

A fiscal locks takes the power away from everyone.

3
0
JXB
JXB
1 year ago
Reply to  stewart

How about abolition of all taxation except limited taxes on land value and consumer sales.

Such tax to cover essential working of government and defence, public services returned to the private sector, no welfare, and borrowing limit of 5% of GDP only in times of stress.

5
0
stewart
stewart
1 year ago
Reply to  JXB

Oh. I’m up for all that. I was just trying to be “realistic” to illustrate my point. But, yes, that would be even better.

3
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 year ago
Reply to  stewart

You could argue that a fiscal lock is undemocratic, but then you could argue that a limited democracy, where certain rights cannot be removed by simple majority, is better than what we have.

1
0
RW
RW
1 year ago

This stakeholder¹ democracy resembles Mussolini’s corporatist state a lot, ie, it looks very much like a fascist core concept.

¹ Can we have steakholder democracy instead? Sounds like more fun, especially if there’s also some pintholding.

5
0
Freddy Boy
Freddy Boy
1 year ago

The Swamp is truly Septic !!

1
0
adamcollyer
adamcollyer
1 year ago

“Stakeholder democracy is different in that it views the electorate as only one voice in the lawmaking and governing process – and not necessarily the most important.”

Actually I think this understates it. It views the electorate as fully irrelevant. Voters only get a legitimate say if they are directly affected by a measure as a” stakeholder”.

“Stakeholder democracy” is nothing less than the complete repudiation of democracy. We are seeing our ancient democratic system being literally dismantled.

2
0
Norfolk-Sceptic
Norfolk-Sceptic
1 year ago
Reply to  adamcollyer

It is dismantling the Crown in Parliament, so allowing Parliament to evade responsibility.

0
0
RTSC
RTSC
1 year ago

Henry Ford – “you can have any colour car you want as long as its black.”

British Establishment – you can have any Government you want, as long as the policies don’t change.

1
0
Norfolk-Sceptic
Norfolk-Sceptic
1 year ago
Reply to  RTSC

At least you would have a car!

If there’s no possibility that policies can change, you wouldn’t be having a government, one that represented us.

0
0
Jackthegripper
Jackthegripper
1 year ago

“If the Fiscal Responsibility Bill passes, all future governments will have to request that the OBR prepares an analysis of any proposed fiscal measure”
This isn’t true, any future government can, if it chooses, repeal the Bill. No government is bound by the decisions of a previous one.

Successive governments have abdicated responsibility to unelected, unaccountable bodies. This is shameful and a disgrace, elected politicians should be responsible not quangos.

0
0
Old Brit
Old Brit
1 year ago

It is an interesting question , why economics is not a science.
Frederick Soddy, a Nobel Laureate chemist, pointed out that in science, wealth is positive and money is negative. Who knew ?

0
0

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