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Boxes of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine are stored in a refrigerator at the Vaccine Village in Antwerp, Belgium, March 16, 2021. (AP) Boxes of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine are stored in a refrigerator at the Vaccine Village in Antwerp, Belgium, March 16, 2021. (AP)

Boxes of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine are stored in a refrigerator at the Vaccine Village in Antwerp, Belgium, March 16, 2021. (AP)

Gabrielle Settles
By Gabrielle Settles October 20, 2021

Photo of AstraZeneca vaccine package was doctored to show 2018 production date

If Your Time is short

  • The photo cited in the article was doctored to include a fake date stamp.

  • AstraZeneca began working on its COVID-19 vaccine in 2020. It was approved for use in the United Kingdom in December 2020, and approved in the European Union in January 2021.

An article shared on Facebook by "The Hal Turner Radio Show" claims that a photo of a vaccine package from drug maker AstraZeneca proves that the COVID-19 outbreak in 2020 was planned and intentional. 

The Oct. 12 article claimed the photo showed the vaccine was manufactured on July 15, 2018, even though COVID-19 "wasn’t discovered until 2019."

"If COVID-19 didn't become an outbreak until late in 2019, and the outbreak wasn't even named ‘COVID-19’ until February 11, 2020, then how could AstraZeneca have been manufacturing ‘COVID-19 VACCINE’ in July of 2018?" the article questioned. 

The answer, it claimed, is that the pandemic must have been planned, and "the disease itself would have to have been INTENTIONALLY RELEASED."  

The article was shared in several Facebook posts, and Facebook flagged it as a part of its efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.) 

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The real explanation for the discrepancy is not an insidious plot, but a photo-editing job. The image of the package was doctored to include the fake 2018 manufacturing date. 

Reuters, Africa Check and Agence France-Presse have fact checked other posts that shared this photo, which was altered to add a darkly printed date on one of the box’s flaps. The original photo appeared in a Nov. 12, 2020, Facebook post that shared another false claim about the company’s vaccine. That photo shows the same package, but without the added date. 

In a statement to AFP, an AstraZeneca spokesperson confirmed that the 2018 date stamp was fake and had been digitally added to the photo of the package.

AstraZeneca announced its partnership with Oxford University to develop and distribute a COVID-19 vaccine on April 30, 2020, and signed an agreement in June 2020 to create the packaging. The vaccine was first approved for emergency use in the United Kingdom on Dec. 30, 2020, and approved for use in Europe on Jan. 29, 2021. 

PolitiFact reached out to the "Hal Turner Radio Show" for comment, but did not get a response.

We rate this claim Pants on Fire!

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Photo of AstraZeneca vaccine package was doctored to show 2018 production date

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