Man Died After Falling From a Bridge: He Suffered 'Devastating' Reaction to The Covid Vaccination

2 months ago
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👉 Courtesy: The Daily Mail
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14377783/Man-29-died-suicide-manchester-Covid-19-vaccine-inquest.html#

A 29-year-old man who died by suicide suffered from a 'devastating' two-year brain degeneration after receiving a Covid-19 booster jab, a coroner has ruled.

Andrew Heys, 29, is said to have reacted 'very badly' to the vaccine in December 2021 which saw him develop a rare autoimmune disease known as Post-Vaccination Auto-Immune Encephalopathy.

And the disease which can incite memory loss, seizures, insomnia, delusions and paranoia has been listed as one of the causes of Mr Heys' death, as well as drowning.

On the day of his death last year, the 29-year-old from Salford, Manchester, climbed over a bridge at Manchester Ship Canal and dialled 999, but due to signal issues he hung up and the case was 'closed'.

It was reported that 'desperate' Mr Heys' final words to the call handler were 'forget it' and moments later he fell into the water and drowned on March 12, 2024.

His body was found four days later.

Now, a coroner at Bolton Coroners Court has raised concerns into the circumstances of Mr Heys' death, after hearing how the 999 call operator failed to return the 29-year-old's call to the Ambulance Service.

John Pollard, Assistant Coroner for West Manchester, said: 'He reacted very badly to the vaccination and thereafter suffered from Auto-Immune Encephalopathy, the effects of which were devastating both physically and mentally.'

It was reported that Mr Heys called 999 in the early hours of the morning and was put through to an on-call locum GP.

The medical professional told an inquest into Mr Heys' death that she could not hear what he was saying as his phone connection was weak.

After struggling with the signal, Mr Heys told the call handler to 'forget it' and ended the call before he climbed over the parapet and fell into the water.

Mr Pollard said that during the inquest, he heard that the GP who was acting on behalf of the out-of-hours provider, BARDOC, had 'never been trained' by them in how to follow their pathways.

'This meant that she "closed" the call alter speaking to the patient, rather than returning it to the Ambulance Service as should have happened,' the coroner said.

'She was also confused about how she could access the patient's own GP records; again, she said she had not had any training in this regard.

'During the course of the evidence, I heard, yet again, the common complaint that one health professional is unable to access the health records of the patient held by another health professional.

'In this case, the manager of the 111 Helpline agreed that the various IT systems do not "talk to each other".

'It is of concern to me as to why all bona fide health professionals cannot have access to all health data held anywhere within the NHS.'

Mr Pollard issued a prevention of future deaths report to the Department of Health and Social Care and BARDOC, the organisation which provides urgent and community healthcare services in Greater Manchester.

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