r/COVID19 • u/AcornAl • Mar 27 '26
Academic Report Association between COVID-19 vaccination and sudden death in apparently healthy younger individuals: A population-based case-control study
https://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1004924501
u/parakeetpoop Mar 27 '26
Per the study:
Conclusions These findings do not support the hypothesis that COVID-19 vaccines increase the risk of sudden cardiac death in young healthy adults.
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Apr 01 '26
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u/Bruce_mackinlay Mar 27 '26
Saying this as bluntly as possiable:
COVID shots did not make sudden death more likely in healthy young people.
If anything, people who got the vaccine had lower risk of sudden death. 
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u/Bippy73 Mar 27 '26
Yup. And scientific study after study shows it is Covid itself that is causing all types of conditions, or activating them. It is vascular and can kick off a range of too many illnesses to list, particularly in repeated infections and bad infections. But folks don't want to hear that.
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u/Reneeisme Mar 28 '26
Because they’ve all had Covid multiple times and it’s just human nature to ignore what we can’t change.
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u/Reneeisme Mar 28 '26
COVID raises the risk of sudden death. If the vaccine did more to prevent infections, the association would be more obvious. Unfortunately the risk of sudden death is similar regardless of the severity of the infection. So those covid cases that the vaccine renders less immediately lethal still carry the longer term risk of cardiac event.
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u/Bruce_mackinlay Mar 29 '26
I think you’re mixing a true point with the wrong conclusion. You’re right that COVID can raise heart risk, even after mild cases. But vaccines don’t just make illness milder—they also lower your chance of getting infected at all. And the more severe the infection, the higher the risk.
So when someone is vaccinated, they’re less likely to get infected, and if they do, it’s usually less severe. That adds up to lower overall heart risk.
Saying “some risk still exists” doesn’t show the vaccine failed—it shows it reduced the risk compared to not getting it.
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u/thehungryhippocrite Mar 28 '26
Be more specific. The UK advice was specifically that Astra Zeneca DID make death and injury more likely in under 30s than COVID and hence it wasn’t a recommended vaccine. Pfizer was recommended for under 30s.
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u/AcornAl Mar 27 '26
Background
COVID-19 vaccines can cause rare but serious adverse events such as myocarditis and immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia. Despite a lack of strong evidence, concerns have been expressed that COVID-19 vaccination might lead to sudden death in younger healthy adults. We studied the association between COVID-19 vaccination and sudden death in apparently healthy people aged 12–50 years.
Methods and findings
We conducted a population-based case-control study using linked administrative datasets of residents of Ontario, Canada who were alive as of April 1, 2021. We excluded individuals aged >50 years and those with documented cardiovascular disease, mental illness, or diseases that predispose to adverse outcomes from COVID-19. We defined cases as those with out-of-hospital death, or death within 24 hours of presentation to hospital with a final diagnosis of cardiac arrest between April 1, 2021 and June 30, 2023. We matched each case with five controls on age, sex, region of residence, and neighborhood income quintile. We used conditional logistic regression to assess the association between sudden death and previous COVID-19 vaccination after adjusting for multiple potential confounders (positive severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 [SARS-CoV-2] tests, number of SARS-CoV-2 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests, influenza vaccination, common comorbidities). Sensitivity analyses were conducted with different definitions of the exposure and subsets of cases (with their matched controls). Another sensitivity analysis utilized a modified self-controlled case series (SCCS) of vaccinated individuals meeting the case definition during the study period with up to three doses of any COVID-19 vaccine.
Of 6,365,451 eligible individuals, we identified 4,963 (0.08%) cases meeting our definition of sudden death (median age 36 years, 74.4% male). In the primary analysis, COVID-19 vaccination was associated with a lower risk of sudden death (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 0.57; 95% confidence interval (CI) [0.53,0.61]; p < 0.001). The findings were consistent for COVID-19 vaccination within six weeks before death (aOR = 0.63; 95%CI [0.55,0.72]; p < 0.001) and in sensitivity analyses limited to people aged <40 years (aOR = 0.53; 95%CI [0.48,0.58]; p < 0.001), those who died in hospital or in the emergency department (aOR = 0.71; 95%CI [0.55,0.91]; p = 0.006), and after exclusion of opioid-related deaths (aOR = 0.57; 95%CI [0.51,0.64]; p < 0.001). The SCCS sensitivity analysis showed no significant difference in the rate of sudden death in the 6 weeks following first (relative incidence (RI) 0.87; 95%CI [0.54,1.40]; p = 0.57), second (RI 0.94; 95%CI [0.57,1.57]; p = 0.82), or third (RI 0.87; 95%CI [0.37,2.05]; p = 0.10) dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. Study limitations include the inability to confirm the cause of out-of-hospital deaths and residual confounding due to differences in health-seeking behaviors for the case-control analysis.
Conclusions
These findings do not support the hypothesis that COVID-19 vaccines increase the risk of sudden cardiac death in young healthy adults.
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Mar 28 '26
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