AIIMS Delhi Autopsy Study Examines Link Between COVID-19 Vaccines and Sudden Deaths in Young Adults
New research from AIIMS, Delhi, has found no proof that COVID-19 vaccination is linked with sudden deaths in young adults aged 18-45, easing growing worries. The autopsy-based study reported that most such deaths still come from long-known medical causes, especially heart disease, rather than recent vaccination drives.
Health experts involved in interpreting the data stressed that sudden deaths in younger people, while devastating, usually relate to hidden conditions. Many of these problems, particularly cardiovascular diseases, often stay undiagnosed for years and need early screening, lifestyle changes and quick access to proper medical treatment.
AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors

COVID-19 vaccination and sudden deaths: key findings from AIIMS study
The observational study ran for one year at a tertiary care centre and tracked adults between 18 and 45 years. Researchers compared COVID-19 vaccination status, illness history and age across different groups. They reported no statistically significant association between vaccination status and sudden deaths in this young population.
The team also observed that the COVID-19 vaccination profile and past illness patterns were similar in older and younger adults among the autopsy cases. No causal link emerged between age group, vaccination status and unexpected deaths, suggesting other medical triggers remained the primary reasons behind these fatalities.
COVID-19 vaccination and sudden deaths: causes of mortality pattern
The study highlighted that coronary artery disease continues as the leading driver of sudden deaths in young adults. Respiratory and unexplained deaths together formed another major share and, according to the authors, need closer investigation. They stressed that these areas demand focused public health planning and further research attention.
According to the report, cardiovascular system-related reasons formed nearly 60 per cent of sudden deaths in younger adults, with respiratory conditions responsible for about 20 per cent. Other non-cardiac factors made up the remaining share of fatalities, matching patterns seen in many international datasets on similar deaths.
| Cause category | Approximate share of sudden deaths |
|---|---|
| Cardiovascular system-related causes | ~60% |
| Respiratory-related causes | ~20% |
| Other non-cardiac conditions | Remaining cases |
COVID-19 vaccination and sudden deaths: how the research was conducted
A multidisciplinary team from AIIMS, Delhi, and other medical colleges in Delhi and Chandigarh led the project. The research, titled "Burden of Sudden Death in Young Adults: A One-Year Observational Study at a Tertiary Care Centre in India", appears in the Indian Journal of Medical Research, published by the Indian Council of Medical Research.
Researchers used several tools to examine each sudden death case in depth. Methods included verbal autopsy with relatives, post-mortem imaging, conventional autopsy and detailed histopathological tests. The findings aligned with wider global evidence that supports the safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines used in national immunisation programmes.
Speaking to journalists, Dr. Sudheer Arava, Professor at AIIMS, New Delhi, said the paper matters because of public confusion. The study directly addresses claims on social media and other platforms that link COVID-19 vaccination to sudden deaths in India.
Dr. Arava urged people to depend on trusted medical sources when judging such claims. "Citizens are advised to rely on credible scientific sources and avoid misinformation that may undermine public confidence in proven public health interventions," Dr. Arava added. Dr. Arava also stated that evidence-based research should shape debate on vaccines and sudden deaths.
The authors and other health specialists stressed that sudden deaths in young adults remain an important public health issue in India. However, the current data point towards long-standing cardiovascular and respiratory risks, not vaccination, as main drivers. They argued that strong screening programmes, better awareness and timely care could reduce many of these avoidable losses.
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