The answer is yes, "as determined by the experts" that made the recommendation after looking at the data on this and also the data from what has happened in the UK/EU with the AZ vaccine which uses a very similar method. Are the experts correct here - no one knows at this exact second. It will take time and future studies to see if they made the correct call. One point that people are missing in the reported data is that this type of blood clot is not the usual kind where the normal treatment that I doctor would follow would fix it. The pause here is about getting the information out to the doctors and the public that says "Hey Public, if you get J&J and feel this way X,Y,Z with in X weeks of getting it go to the doctor. Hey Doctor, if someone comes in in X time of getting the J&J and feels this way X,Y,Z be aware that it could not be the NORMAL thing you think and look for XXX and treat it this different way to make sure you have a good outcome."
We will ask if the vaccine somehow cause those 6 people to be hit by a car, if we decide the vaccine caused that would be listed. (I don't see how a vaccine could cause people to be hit by a car, but I'm open to suggestions)