In a damning admission, the UK government has admitted that thousands of British citizens have been left “permanently disabled” by Covid “vaccines.”
The UK’s Department of Health has revealed that the government is seeing an influx of people being diagnosed with life-altering vaccine-induced injuries.
Thousands of citizens have now applied for compensation from the government after being left with disabilities from the “vaccines.”
British Health Secretary Wes Streeting is reportedly considering plans to establish a program for those suffering from devastating conditions that were caused by the Covid injections.
In the UK, many citizens were forced to get vaccinated in order to partake in regular society, with many facing losing their jobs for failing to comply.
However, as with highly-vaccinated nations, deaths and injuries have surged since the public rollout of the shots.
The number of people claiming they are suffering side effects from the injections has now become so overwhelming that there are concerns that the existing government-funded Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme (VDPS) is struggling to cope.
Aside from reports of disabilities and injuries, the government has also recorded a surge in claims from family members of people who have been killed by the injections.
Campaigners from the Vaccine Bereaved and Injured UK group argue the VDPS is no longer fit for purpose.
Officials are now looking at whether the scheme should be reformed or overhauled.
Some of the families represented by the group are involved in legal action against pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca.
In court documents earlier this year, AstraZeneca admitted that its Covid vaccine can cause blood clots and a low platelet count.
The vaccine maker is being sued in a class action over claims that the jab, developed with Oxford University, caused death or serious injury in dozens of cases.
Last month, Britain’s Shadow Attorney General Sir Jeremy Wright attended a meeting with Wes Streeting and Andrew Gwynne, a health minister, along with campaigners.
He has another follow-up meeting with the health secretary scheduled in the coming weeks.
“The two options are reforming the VDPS and also setting up a bespoke compensation scheme,” he told the Sunday Telegraph.
“But it is not an option for the government to put its head in the sand and do nothing.
“If you are in the very small minority of those injured [by the Covid vaccine], those people have a right to expect the state to look after them properly – they were only doing what the state asked them to do.”
More than 15,000 people have applied for compensation from the VDPS for alleged harm caused by Covid vaccines.
However, only 188 have been told they are entitled to a payout.
Figures show the majority of successful claims relate to the AstraZeneca shot.
The rest of the claims are related to the Pfizer and Moderna injections.
So far, people have been awarded compensation for vaccine-induced conditions such as stroke, heart attack, dangerous blood clots, inflammation of the spinal cord, excessive swelling of the vaccinated limb, and facial paralysis.
The VDPS awards a taxpayer-funded one-off £120,000 ($156K) tax-free payment to people who have been severely injured by vaccines.
The families of those who have died also get the same payout.
In order to qualify, individuals have to be deemed 60 percent disabled.
People who are considered not disabled enough get nothing.