About 10% people have mRNA in blood after 28 days. F*ck!!!
Natural immunity finally acknowledged as protective.
Also see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZhzWzoPB3M
The current report presents the case of a 76-year-old man with Parkinson’s disease (PD) who died three weeks after receiving his third COVID-19 vaccination. The patient was first vaccinated in May 2021 with the ChAdOx1 nCov-19 vector vaccine, followed by two doses of the BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine in July and December 2021. The family of the deceased requested an autopsy due to ambiguous clinical signs before death. PD was confirmed by post-mortem examinations. Furthermore, signs of aspiration pneumonia and systemic arteriosclerosis were evident. However, histopathological analyses of the brain uncovered previously unsuspected findings, including acute vasculitis (predominantly lymphocytic) as well as multifocal necrotizing encephalitis of unknown etiology with pronounced inflammation including glial and lymphocytic reaction. In the heart, signs of chronic cardiomyopathy as well as mild acute lympho-histiocytic myocarditis and vasculitis were present. Although there was no history of COVID-19 for this patient, immunohistochemistry for SARS-CoV-2 antigens (spike and nucleocapsid proteins) was performed. Surprisingly, only spike protein but no nucleocapsid protein could be detected within the foci of inflammation in both the brain and the heart, particularly in the endothelial cells of small blood vessels.
Since no nucleocapsid protein could be detected, the presence of spike protein must be ascribed to vaccination rather than to viral infection.
The findings corroborate previous reports of encephalitis and myocarditis caused by gene-based COVID-19 vaccines.
Keywords: COVID-19 vaccination; necrotizing encephalitis; myocarditis; detection of spike protein; detection of nucleocapsid protein; autopsy
Good evidence (from one autopsy) that mRNA vaccine caused brain and heart damage that could not have been caused by contracting covid virus -- damaged brain and heart tissues contain ONLY spike protein (which is in vaccine and covid) but no nucleocapsid protein (which only the virus produces). I.E., if this damage was caused by virus, it would contain both molecules, not just spike protein.
U.K. moving toward targeted vaccination. Healthy < 50 yrs. no longer encouraged to get booster. Campbell has been asking for this for many months.
1 in 800 adverse events from mRNA vaccine. Other vaccines were pulled for a few as 1 in 100,000 adverse events.
Conclusion seems to be that the impact of natural immunity is being minimized or ignored by Covid vaccine policy makers.
Corbevax
Medical experts continue to drill down the message that everyone needs to get vaccinated globally for Covid-19 but the issue of vaccine inequality in low and middle-income countries still persists. NBC News’ Morgan Chesky reports on a group of scientists in Texas who are developing a patent-free vaccine to bridge these equity gaps.
https://academic.oup.com/cid/advance-article/doi/10.1093/cid/ciab707/6353927
Mpg2022
I'm a cancer and reconstructive surgeon. The nature of my subspecialty means that I have a better working knowledge of muscle anatomy than just about any other physician or surgeon outside my subspecialty. In the deltoid, the large veins are only found on the deep aspect of the muscle where the blood supply enters the muscle (ie: the neurovascular hilum). The large vessels arborise very quickly into much, much smaller and finer branches such that nearer the muscle surface (the area where most IM injection needles would get to), there are few if any veins of sufficient size that cannulation could occur leading to an inadvertant intravenous injection. This risk is reduced further if the site is pinched during needle entry (collapses the blood vessels).
That said, I have never understood why present day training seems to advise against aspiration prior to intramuscular injection in both medical and nursing courses. Perhaps I am a bit of a dinosaur (graduated medical school in 1995), so I still do it the traditional way. I know full well that the likelihood of inadvertant IV injection with the short, fine needles (as used with Covid-19 and flu vaccination) is practically zero. However, it does no harm to aspirate, seems entirely logical and sensible; and is hardly a huge extra task in the process. I have seen enough freak events happen over my many years of work that I rather not take any chances. I also do not understand the seeming active resistance that some medical and nursing practitioners have when asked by patients to aspirate prior to IM injection. There's no need to be difficult for something so simple and if it affords the patient a measure of reassurance, surely we should just do so rather than be a**hats about it.
Sorry for my rather long post.