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Nurses dead after the vaccine, Tamà in commission at Ars: “

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The hearing of the doctor Sebastiano Tamà, brother-in-law and family doctor of the nurse Giacomo Venuto, who died on 5 August last, twenty days before the death of his colleague Antonio Mondo, was held in the health commission at Ars, for which reporting to AIFA in relation to the anticovid vaccination to which the two health workers who worked at the Neurolesi center had already undergone in January.

The cases ended up in the sixth commission at the ARS after Tamà’s request, which asked to investigate the possible causal link between the vaccination performed and the death of two healthy subjects.

For Venuto, wegener’s vasculitis was diagnosed in the mid-terminal stage. “A diagnosis that took place in clear delay compared to a previous hospitalization – explains Tamà – and which was mistakenly considered as previous in my opinion as my brother-in-law, among other things a sportsman, had never suffered from anything”.

Yesterday the leaders of the Papardo hospital were also in commission, where the two nurses died. The general, health and administrative directors were present. The general manager Angelo Paino reported on the doctors’ work, highlighting the correctness of the procedures followed during the hospitalization phase but did not enter into the merits of the causal link between vaccine and death which is in any case to the attention of AIFA.

Nurse Mondo’s medical record has already been seized by the judicial authority.

Present for the health councilor Ruggero Razza, the manager Rosalia Murè who declared wide availability for an inspection act also stating that the batches of the Pfizer vaccine administered to the two nurses were different.

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A testimony partially disputed by Tamà who stated that only for the first administration the two colleagues had received doses from different batches.

Tamà also said he was saddened by the absence of the top management of the Piedmont hospital where the first stages of aggravation of Venuto’s disease were recorded, which then made the transfer to Papardo indispensable. “There have been various controversial steps while early diagnosis is the key to treating a patient well – concludes Tamà – And here, in my opinion, there were some shortcomings that should be investigated”.

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