In the United Kingdom, the vaccination campaign, based largely on the AstraZeneca vaccine, has been completely turned upside down.

And for good reason, the European Medicines Agency ruled on Wednesday that the risk of thrombosis does indeed exist after the injection of the Swedish-British serum.

This vaccine is now reserved for over 30s in the country. 

The European Medicines Agency acknowledged on Wednesday that a "very rare" risk of blood clots linked to the injection of the anti-Covid AstraZeneca vaccine exists.

In the United Kingdom, where three out of five vaccines are supplied by the Swedish-British laboratory, it is the cold shower.

All the London press is worried, Thursday morning, about the future of the vaccination campaign.

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It is "a blow to the vaccination program", writes the

Daily Mail

.

After nineteen deaths linked to thrombosis, the British Medicines Agency has finally decided to restrict the use of the vaccine to people over the age of thirty.

Interviewed by the BBC, Prime Minister Boris Johnson nevertheless assures us that this change of course will not delay the vaccination process.

He is also urging the British to get vaccinated. 

No campaign planned to reassure

For its part, the

Guardian

title on the risk of mistrust in the face of the vaccine which may increase in the future, with this new configuration.

The

Financial Times,

 meanwhile, explains that the government has not planned a campaign to reassure after these announcements. 

MAIL: Keep calm and carry on jabbing # TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter.com / pGdpRgctH6

- Neil Henderson (@hendopolis) April 7, 2021

Finally, the

Metro

daily

is simpler with this one: "Keep calm and carry on jabbing".

Translate this phrase, which is very well known across the Channel, by "stay calm and keep getting vaccinated".