Michelle Anderson v. HHS - tetanus-diphtheria (Td), shoulder injury related to vaccine administration (SIRVA) (2025)
Case summary [AI summaries can sometimes make mistakes]
On July 17, 2023, Michelle Anderson filed a petition under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program alleging that a tetanus-diphtheria (Td) vaccination administered on February 6, 2022 caused a shoulder injury related to vaccine administration (SIRVA). Respondent denied that the petitioner sustained the alleged Table injury, denied vaccine causation, and denied that the current condition was a sequela of a vaccine-related injury.
The public stipulation materials do not describe the first symptom, onset interval, medical examinations, diagnostic testing, treatment course, or day-to-day limitations. The parties resolved the case by joint stipulation.
On February 25, 2025, Chief Special Master Brian H. Corcoran found the stipulation reasonable and awarded $10,000.00 through counsel's IOLTA account as compensation for all damages available under the Vaccine Act.
Theory of causation
Adult petitioner; Td vaccine February 6, 2022; alleged SIRVA. COMPENSATED by stipulation. Respondent denied Table SIRVA, causation, and sequelae. Public text lacks clinical chronology. Award $10,000.00. SM Corcoran February 25, 2025. Petition filed July 17, 2023.
Source PDFs
USCOURTS-cofc-1_23-vv-01098