Large-Scale New Research Links Covid Jabs to Heart, Blood, and Neurological Problems
According to a comprehensive new study, the Covid-19 vaccinations have serious negative side effects, including as problems with the heart, blood, and nervous systems.
According to a comprehensive new study, the Covid-19 vaccinations have serious negative side effects, including as problems with the heart, blood, and nervous systems.
Viral-vector vaccines like the AstraZeneca jab were linked to “an increase of a type of blood clot in the brain,” and mRNA Covid jabs made by Pfizer and Moderna were found to have higher risks of “heart-related inflammation” in a Global Vaccine Data Network research study (GVDN), which is purported to be the “largest global vaccine safety study to date.”
The report does not seem to have looked into the substantial number of deaths that may have been connected to the vaccination, despite listing innumerable vaccine skeptics who demanded safety information early on.
According to RT: The Global Vaccine Data Network (GVDN) said on Monday that a big data analysis involving 99 million individuals in eight countries revealed a higher than anticipated prevalence of adverse effects from several Covid-19 vaccines.
The study examined 13 disorders relating to the nervous system, blood, and heart and was first published in the medical journal Vaccine on February 12. These conditions were referred to as "adverse events of special interest." Researchers examined 99,068,901 immunized people from 10 locations across eight nations.
The primary author of the study, Kristyna Faksova of the Statens Serum Institut in Copenhagen, Denmark, stated that "the size of the population in this study increased the possibility of identifying rare potential vaccine safety signals."
The GVDN reports that among those who received the Pfizer/BioNTech (BNT162b2) and Moderna (mRNA-1273) injections, the research found a higher incidence of myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle) and pericarditis (inflammation of the heart sac) than was anticipated.
Moderna’s vaccine also had a higher rate of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM, inflammation and swelling in the brain and spinal cord), with seven observed events compared to two expected within 42 days of the first shot.
After the first three doses of either mRNA injection, safety signals for myocarditis were "consistently identified," with the largest ratio occurring after the second dosage. Following the first and fourth doses of mRNA-1273 as well as the third dosage of the Oxford/Astra Zeneca (ChAdOx1) viral vector vaccine, signs of pericarditis were also noted.
The findings, together with a caution not to read too much into correlations and the assurance that the vaccinations are both safe and effective, are available to the public on the GVDN's interactive data dashboards.
Dr. Helen Petousis-Harris, co-director of GVDN, stated, "We are able to support greater transparency and stronger communications to the health sector and public by making the data dashboards publicly available."