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Tuesday, February 1, 2022

COVID Videos and Articles February 2022 (Ivermectin Trials, Ivermectin Meta Analysis, HCQ Meta Analysis, Vaccine Injuries, Cancer Trend, Fertility Trends, MIS-C, Myocarditis, DOD COVER UP)

 Do Your Own Research - Not medical advice - Make your own decisions - Think for yourself 

 https://stopworldcontrol.com/


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Rare Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome Detected in Vaccinated Young: Lancet Study  MIS-C

By Naveen Athrappully
 
February 25, 2022 Updated: February 25, 2022

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02/25/22

8-Year-Old Boy Dies of MIS 7 Days After Pfizer Vaccine, VAERS Report Shows

VAERS data released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention included a total of 1,134,984 reports of adverse events from all age groups following COVID vaccines, including 24,402 deaths and 196,203 serious injuries between Dec. 14, 2020, and Feb. 18, 2022.

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The Global Disinformation Campaign to Suppress The Evidence of Efficacy of Ivermectin

After a week of non-stop lectures, panels, speeches, and expert testimony, my new mission has now come into focus. 2.1.22 Pierre Kory 


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New Study on Ivermectin ‘Should Convince Any Naysayer’: Dr. Pierre Kory

By Zachary Stieber and Jan Jekielek
 
February 1, 2022 Updated: February 1, 2022



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February 1, 2022


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INFOGRAPHIC: Approved and Non-FDA Approved COVID-19 Treatments
 
February 7, 2022 Updated: February 7, 2022

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02/02/22

FDA Grants Full Approval of Moderna’s Spikevax COVID Vaccine — Another ‘Bait-and-Switch?’

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Monday granted full approval of Moderna’s Spikevax COVID vaccine for people 18 and older. Similar to the agency’s licensing last year of Pfizer’s Comirnaty vaccine, the approval raised a number of legal questions.


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COVER UP!!!



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EPISODE 253: CANCELING COVID

HighWire 
February 3, 2022 


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‘Against The Wind’ With Dr. Paul Thomas

Science and medicine are at a crossroad and courageous health practitioners are standing up to ensure that humanity and integrity aren’t left behind in the name of “progress”. Dr. Paul Thomas is one of those leading the way and amplifying the voice of brave scientists and health care practitioners who are willing to put their careers on the line to make sure “health” and “care” are restored to health care.


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 2021 Jan; 163: 105207.
Published online 2020 Sep 21. doi: 10.1016/j.phrs.2020.105207
PMCID: PMC7505114
PMID: 32971268

Ivermectin, a potential anticancer drug derived from an antiparasitic drug

Mingyang Tang,a,b,1 Xiaodong Hu,c,1 Yi Wang,a,d Xin Yao,a,d Wei Zhang,a,b Chenying Yu,a,b Fuying Cheng,a,b Jiangyan Li,a,d and Qiang Fanga,d,e,*
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THE LAST AMERICAN VAGABOND 
February 12 2022

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I printed out this entire article, because it is behind a paywall.  

CDC Says Some People Should Wait Longer for Second COVID-19 Shot Due to Heart Inflammation Risk

By Zachary Stieber
 
February 23, 2022 Updated: February 23, 2022

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has officially altered its recommended COVID-19 vaccination schedule in a bid to address concerns about the elevated rate of heart inflammation seen among many groups who have gotten a vaccine.

The two most widely administered COVID-19 vaccines in the country are made by Moderna and Pfizer. Recipients are advised to get a two-dose primary series of each.

Before the new update, people were told to get a second Pfizer shot 21 days after the first, or a second Moderna shot 28 days after the first.

The new guidance says people can wait as long as eight weeks between the first and second jabs.

Lengthening the interval is a response to the higher-than-expected rates of myocarditis and pericarditis, two types of heart inflammation, found among men under 40 and some females after they’d gotten a second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna jabs.

“While absolute risk remains small, the relative risk for myocarditis is higher for males ages 12-39 years, and this risk might be reduced by extending the interval between the first and second dose,” the CDC says on its website.

Myocarditis alone after Moderna’s second dose was reported at a rate of 68 per million and after Pfizer’s second dose at a rate of about 47 per million in males 18 to 39, according to a government analysis of data from the Vaccine Safety Datalink, a surveillance system. Several studies have pegged the risk in some groups of myocarditis following vaccination as higher than from COVID-19 itself, leading some experts to call for a partial pause of at least Moderna’s vaccine, if not Pfizer’s as well, but U.S. officials have not heeded those calls.

The CDC says it’s verified no post-vaccination deaths caused by myocarditis, but autopsies of two young men performed by state experts two young men said the vaccines appeared to lead to their deaths.

Some studies indicate that the risk may be reduced by extending the intervals, and Canada and other countries changed the recommended intervals months ago.

“The longer interval resulted in lower myocarditis rates, whereas the shorter interval had higher myocarditis and pericarditis rates,” Dr. Bryna Warshawsky of the Public Health Agency of Canada told a CDC vaccine advisory panel in a recent meeting.

There’s also hope that extending the intervals will trigger better immune system responses. Vaccine effectiveness goes down over time, and has proven particularly poor against the Omicron variant of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus.

The widening interval “maybe would reduce the incidence of having any adverse effects, especially myocarditis,” Dr. Peter Gulick, an associate professor of medicine at Michigan State University, told The Epoch Times. “Plus, there’s some evidence in the past that in certain groups that are young and or otherwise healthy, if you do extend it out you might get a better antibody response because what you do is you allow your immune system to mature a little bit from the first dose, and it gets to mature so that we get the second dose, it’s not too early where the immune system hasn’t matured enough.”

The new guidance applies to Americans 12 or older who haven’t already received a primary series. About 73 percent of Americans 12 or older have gotten a primary series as of Feb. 22, according to data reported by jurisdictions and health care providers to the CDC.

People with weakened immune systems should stick to the previous recommendations, as should adults 65 or older and “others who need rapid protection due to increased concern about community transmission or risk of severe disease,” the CDC says.

Those who do wait longer to get their second shot will have their recommended booster dose, should they decide to get one, pushed back. The vaccination schedule advises all Americans 12 and up to get a booster at 5 months or later after their second shot.

The change came months after the data were available supporting a shift, some experts noted, with multiple European countries extending the intervals last year.

Dr. Walid Gellad, professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh, called the update “months late” but added that it was “good to see this now as official guidance.”

An 8-week interval “may be optimal for some people … especially for young men,” he wrote on Twitter.

Dr. Peter McCullough, a cardiologist who formerly worked at Baylor University Medical Center, said that extending the intervals wasn’t enough to restrict the risks of vaccine-induced myocarditis.

The only method “is to use restrictive sampling,” McCullough told The Epoch Times in an email. “That means to exclude the population who is at risk for the problem. Based upon the published literature that would exempt men below age 70, women below the age of 50 years, and those with underlying myocardial and pericardial disease. This would get us back to the population that has theoretical benefits of vaccines if they were targeted against future variants, that is, our high-risk seniors.”







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