A Barbadian woman has launched a legal claim against the Barbados government, arguing she developed life-altering, chronic health complications tied to two doses of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine she received in 2021. Court documents from the 2024 filing name the Office of the Attorney General as the defendant, holding the Ministry of Health and Wellness legally responsible for the harm she claims to have endured.
Represented by prominent constitutional attorney and King’s Counsel Larry Smith, the claimant alleges the vaccine administered to her was defective. She argues the government failed to deliver a product that met the reasonable safety standards guaranteed to consumers under the island’s Consumer Protection Act.
Timeline details laid out in the court filing outline that the claimant received her first AstraZeneca dose around April 23, 2021, with the second dose following in June that same year. Approximately eight weeks after her second injection, she first noticed a swollen bruise paired with intense pain beneath her right knee. As additional troubling symptoms emerged, including sharp chest pain and persistent difficulty breathing, she sought medical care twice; both visits ended with doctors unable to identify the root cause of her distress, local outlet Barbados TODAY reports after obtaining a copy of the court documents.
Her condition continued to deteriorate, with bruising spreading across her entire body, breathing becoming increasingly labored, and her energy levels dropping dramatically. When she returned to care, her primary provider referred her to a hematology specialist for targeted testing and evaluation. The pharmacovigilance division of the Barbados Drug Service launched its own investigation into the incident, labeling it a suspected adverse drug reaction linked to the specific batch of the final vaccine dose the woman received. Blood samples analyzed at the Barbados Reference Laboratory confirmed the patient’s symptoms were consistent with vaccine-induced blood clotting, leading medical examiners to conclude her condition was a suspected case of vasculitis triggered by the June 25, 2021 vaccine administration.
In the two years following her diagnosis, between January 2022 and July 2023, the claimant sent five formal letters to the government alerting officials to the state’s alleged liability for her health condition. According to the lawsuit, no substantive response was ever provided to her inquiries. A pre-action formal notice was later delivered to Barbados’ chief medical officer, demanding compensation for the vaccine injury.
The lawsuit accuses the government of multiple counts of negligence: officials failed to put in place support systems for people who experience severe adverse reactions to vaccines distributed through the national COVID-19 vaccination program, and they refused to engage with the claimant despite being fully informed of her debilitating condition. The woman is now seeking multiple forms of legal remedy: general damages for ongoing pain, suffering, and loss of quality of life; special damages to cover lost earnings; full coverage of legal costs; six percent annual interest on awarded damages; and any additional relief the court deems appropriate given the circumstances.
