Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

Page 54«..1020..53545556..6070..»

County board orders limits on vaccine information – News-Register

February 19, 2024

Dan

Challenge to YC HHS Director Manfrin:

Provide the following information on C-19 injections:

1. All ingredients.

2. For Oregon, C-19 injected v. control group:

Rate of all-cause mortality.

Rate of disability.

Rates of myocarditis, stroke, cancer, miscarriage, stillbirth, neurological disorders.

Meanwhile, I just visited the YC HHS website. The following is pure promotion - without useful information:

Vaccine Safety & Effectiveness Side effects after a COVID-19 vaccination are common, but severe reactions are rare. See more information on side effects. Find more information about the COVID-19 vaccines and those who are pregnant and/or breastfeeding. Read more information about the COVID-19 vaccine and children. See more information about myocarditis and pericarditis after COVID-19 vaccination. See more information about the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines.

If you click on any of the links, that takes you to the CDC. Which shamelessly promotes the C-19 injections.

For example: COVID-19 Vaccines While Pregnant or Breastfeeding

"What You Need to Know Everyone ages 6 months and older is recommended to get the updated COVID-19 vaccine. This includes people who are pregnant, breastfeeding, trying to get pregnant now, or those who might become pregnant in the future. Infants ages 6 months and older are recommended to get the updated COVID-19 vaccine even if born to people who were vaccinated or had COVID-19 before or during pregnancy. If you are pregnant or were recently pregnant, you are more likely to get very sick from COVID-19, compared to people who are not pregnant. Additionally, if you have COVID-19 during pregnancy, you are at increased risk of complications that can affect your pregnancy and developing baby. Getting the updated COVID-19 vaccine can help protect both you and your baby from serious illness from COVID-19. People who are pregnant should stay up to date with their COVID-19 vaccines and get an updated COVID-19 vaccine in fall 2023.Evidence shows that: COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy is safe and effective. COVID-19 vaccines are not associated with fertility problems in women or men."

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/recommendations/pregnancy.html?s_cid=10484:is%20the%20vaccine%20safe%20for%20pregnant%20women:sem.ga:p:RG:GM:gen:PTN:FY21

So now facts from professionals are "a one-sided narrative"? Let County Health do their job and share information relevant to the county's health. Starrett's and Berschauer's politically biased opinions are not relevant and have no place in the County Health Department.

These reports are contrary to the CDC promotion:

The Explosive Link Between COVID Vaccines and Increased Cancer Rates in Children & Young Adults BY THE EXPOS ON FEBRUARY 11, 2024

The Explosive Link Between COVID Vaccines and Increased Cancer Rates in Children & Young Adults

NIH in Early 2022 Abruptly Stopped Responding to People Injured by COVID Shots

NIH in Early 2022 Abruptly Stopped Responding to People Injured by COVID Shots

Pfizer wanted to keep this report secret for 75 years. It was obtained via court enforced FOIA:

5.3.6 CUMULATIVE ANALYSIS OF POST-AUTHORIZATION ADVERSE EVENT REPORTS OF PF-07302048 (BNT162B2) RECEIVED THROUGH 28-FEB-2021 Report Prepared by: Worldwide Safety Pfizer

https://phmpt.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/5.3.6-postmarketing-experience.pdf

Superior analysis by Michel Chossudovsky:

Queen Mary and Princess Lindsey have spoken.

Madmacs, and Dr. of epidemiology Dan has also spoken (and spoken) (and spoken some more) (and more to come Im sure)

The NR needs to add a BS alert button. Maybe an icon of a tinfoil hat would be appropriate.

Mary Starrett: Despot Wannabe. Go back to "Faces and Places" on KATU, Mary. You're the worst thing to ever happen to this county.

If you listen to the meeting of 2/15 it's actually much more unhinged than this article implies, as Starrett repeatedly claims her conspiracy theories (her term) have all been proven true and that everyone else has been covering this up but she was right all along. It would be unbelievable in any other County but seems to be acceptable now in Yamhill County.

Clown show continues and our online Dr. Dan continues his never ending quest to get everyone to believe his conspiracy theories.Starrett and Berschauer are nut jobs elected by the voters in our County. Its time to vote in people who actually have some common sense.

The headline of this article is misleading:

"County board orders limits on vaccine information"

In reality, the BOC wants to add information on vaccines.

The purpose being to show both sides of the story.

I don't think there is any objection to presenting CDC information.

The objection is that contrary information is being excluded.

Whence the BOC Order to limit the promotion side of the story.

It is the promoters of vaccines that are excluding vaccine information.

And the BOC which would like to include that excluded information.

Precisely the inverse suggested by the title of this article.

Maybe re-read the 1st paragraph.commissioners want nothing about vaccines other than they are available!.. your post is incorrect.

The complete sentence:

"Yamhill County Commissioners on Thursday ordered Health and Human Services Director Lindsey Manfrin not to tell the public anything about vaccines other than that they are available, in county social media posts."

Note last phrase: "... in county social media posts."

Let's wait to see the final, written Order.

And what effect it may have on the YC HHS website itself.

Right so the commission showing both sides and adding information was something you made up.. seems like the headline was NOT misleading from the information contained in the story.

The BOC's record extends beyond the four corners of the story.

Nice backpedaling.most people would say adding facts that arent in the story then calling the headline misleading is disingenuous.

I read all the posts that County Health put up on social media. None seem over the top. Two even said to talk to your doctor. This is just more manufactured controversy these two commissioners continually spout to get more attention. I will never vote for either of these two. Please support candidates with common sense and fact-based solutions in November.

The plain meaning of the BOC ORDER is clear.

The plain meaning of the N-R article - title & all - is clear.

My comments are meant according to their own plain meaning.

Anyone is free to agree or disagree with the BOC, N-R, or me.

Plain meaning is important as is credibility.

Take this according to its plain meaning.

What do YOU think?

https://i0.wp.com/expose-news.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/image-193-1.webp?resize=1200%2C820&ssl=1

Above UK ONS bar-chart from:

The Explosive Link Between COVID Vaccines and Increased Cancer Rates in Children & Young Adults

Dan posts on forums, Words flowing like a river, Wisdom in pixels.

Dr Dans favorite source is amazing. I love the opening line of the Wikipedia page about Expose News: The Expos (formerly known as The Daily Expos)[3] is a British news page created in 2020 by Jonathan Allen-Walker.[1][2] It is known for publishing COVID-19 and anti-vaccine misinformation.

Apparently it is run by an English welder with no medical training. No other known staff write for it. Countless times their claims have been debunked.

You keep doing your thing Dr Dan, infectious disease and epidemiologist expert!

Straight from the horse's mouth:

UK Office for National Statistics

Dataset Deaths by vaccination status, England

https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/datasets/deathsbyvaccinationstatusengland

In the realm of threads, Dan's words fall with heavy weight, Unliked, he persists.

When our County Commissioners can provide proof of their formal medical education and training then we might be more inclined to value their opinions, but in the meantime they should keep their conspiracy theories to themselves and allow knowledgable trained professionals take the reins on this matter. Stay in your lane, Commissioners.

Looks like the BOC is over the target!

https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.fineartamerica.com%2Fimages-medium-large-5%2Fb-17-on-a-bombing-mission-during-ww-ii-in-heavy-flak-l-brown.jpg&f=1&nofb=1&ipt=18d743c0cad575f4927b0dfa6214f5dfa82dc81faeef3c155f26d8a9ef1fc313&ipo=images

How many posts does it take to get to the center of the extrinsic mind? One? Two?....

Originally posted here:

County board orders limits on vaccine information - News-Register

Largest COVID vaccine study yet finds links to health conditions – The Keene Sentinel

February 19, 2024

State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington Washington D.C. West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Puerto Rico US Virgin Islands Armed Forces Americas Armed Forces Pacific Armed Forces Europe Northern Mariana Islands Marshall Islands American Samoa Federated States of Micronesia Guam Palau Alberta, Canada British Columbia, Canada Manitoba, Canada New Brunswick, Canada Newfoundland, Canada Nova Scotia, Canada Northwest Territories, Canada Nunavut, Canada Ontario, Canada Prince Edward Island, Canada Quebec, Canada Saskatchewan, Canada Yukon Territory, Canada

Zip Code

Country United States of America US Virgin Islands United States Minor Outlying Islands Canada Mexico, United Mexican States Bahamas, Commonwealth of the Cuba, Republic of Dominican Republic Haiti, Republic of Jamaica Afghanistan Albania, People's Socialist Republic of Algeria, People's Democratic Republic of American Samoa Andorra, Principality of Angola, Republic of Anguilla Antarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S) Antigua and Barbuda Argentina, Argentine Republic Armenia Aruba Australia, Commonwealth of Austria, Republic of Azerbaijan, Republic of Bahrain, Kingdom of Bangladesh, People's Republic of Barbados Belarus Belgium, Kingdom of Belize Benin, People's Republic of Bermuda Bhutan, Kingdom of Bolivia, Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana, Republic of Bouvet Island (Bouvetoya) Brazil, Federative Republic of British Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago) British Virgin Islands Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria, People's Republic of Burkina Faso Burundi, Republic of Cambodia, Kingdom of Cameroon, United Republic of Cape Verde, Republic of Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad, Republic of Chile, Republic of China, People's Republic of Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia, Republic of Comoros, Union of the Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, People's Republic of Cook Islands Costa Rica, Republic of Cote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of the Cyprus, Republic of Czech Republic Denmark, Kingdom of Djibouti, Republic of Dominica, Commonwealth of Ecuador, Republic of Egypt, Arab Republic of El Salvador, Republic of Equatorial Guinea, Republic of Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Faeroe Islands Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Fiji, Republic of the Fiji Islands Finland, Republic of France, French Republic French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon, Gabonese Republic Gambia, Republic of the Georgia Germany Ghana, Republic of Gibraltar Greece, Hellenic Republic Greenland Grenada Guadaloupe Guam Guatemala, Republic of Guinea, Revolutionary People's Rep'c of Guinea-Bissau, Republic of Guyana, Republic of Heard and McDonald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras, Republic of Hong Kong, Special Administrative Region of China Hrvatska (Croatia) Hungary, Hungarian People's Republic Iceland, Republic of India, Republic of Indonesia, Republic of Iran, Islamic Republic of Iraq, Republic of Ireland Israel, State of Italy, Italian Republic Japan Jordan, Hashemite Kingdom of Kazakhstan, Republic of Kenya, Republic of Kiribati, Republic of Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait, State of Kyrgyz Republic Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon, Lebanese Republic Lesotho, Kingdom of Liberia, Republic of Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Liechtenstein, Principality of Lithuania Luxembourg, Grand Duchy of Macao, Special Administrative Region of China Macedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Madagascar, Republic of Malawi, Republic of Malaysia Maldives, Republic of Mali, Republic of Malta, Republic of Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania, Islamic Republic of Mauritius Mayotte Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova, Republic of Monaco, Principality of Mongolia, Mongolian People's Republic Montserrat Morocco, Kingdom of Mozambique, People's Republic of Myanmar Namibia Nauru, Republic of Nepal, Kingdom of Netherlands Antilles Netherlands, Kingdom of the New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua, Republic of Niger, Republic of the Nigeria, Federal Republic of Niue, Republic of Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway, Kingdom of Oman, Sultanate of Pakistan, Islamic Republic of Palau Palestinian Territory, Occupied Panama, Republic of Papua New Guinea Paraguay, Republic of Peru, Republic of Philippines, Republic of the Pitcairn Island Poland, Polish People's Republic Portugal, Portuguese Republic Puerto Rico Qatar, State of Reunion Romania, Socialist Republic of Russian Federation Rwanda, Rwandese Republic Samoa, Independent State of San Marino, Republic of Sao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic of Saudi Arabia, Kingdom of Senegal, Republic of Serbia and Montenegro Seychelles, Republic of Sierra Leone, Republic of Singapore, Republic of Slovakia (Slovak Republic) Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia, Somali Republic South Africa, Republic of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Spain, Spanish State Sri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic of St. Helena St. Kitts and Nevis St. Lucia St. Pierre and Miquelon St. Vincent and the Grenadines Sudan, Democratic Republic of the Suriname, Republic of Svalbard & Jan Mayen Islands Swaziland, Kingdom of Sweden, Kingdom of Switzerland, Swiss Confederation Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan, Province of China Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand, Kingdom of Timor-Leste, Democratic Republic of Togo, Togolese Republic Tokelau (Tokelau Islands) Tonga, Kingdom of Trinidad and Tobago, Republic of Tunisia, Republic of Turkey, Republic of Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda, Republic of Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom of Great Britain & N. Ireland Uruguay, Eastern Republic of Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Viet Nam, Socialist Republic of Wallis and Futuna Islands Western Sahara Yemen Zambia, Republic of Zimbabwe

Read the rest here:

Largest COVID vaccine study yet finds links to health conditions - The Keene Sentinel

Few Nursing Facility Residents and Staff Have Received the Latest COVID-19 Vaccine | KFF – KFF

February 19, 2024

Keeping 2 million nursing facility staff and 1.2 million residents current on their COVID-19 vaccines is one tool for reducing deaths from COVID-19 as the virus continues to evolve. KFF analysis found that despite over one-fifth of all U.S. COVID-19 deaths occurring in long-term care facilities, as of January 14, 2024, only 38% of residents and 15% of staff were up-to-date with their COVID-19 vaccines, which the CDC defines as having received the updated Fall 2023 vaccine. Those rates are lower than uptake was for the 2022 vaccine. This data note also finds lower uptake rates for for-profit facilities and state uptake rates that vary from 20% to 63%. Data for this analysis include 14,318 nursing facilities (96% of all nursing facilities, home to 1.2 million residents) that had reported COVID-19 vaccination data as of January 21, 2024.

Uptake of the most recent COVID-19 vaccine is lower among nursing facility residents and staff than uptake was for the fall 2022 vaccine: Only 38% of residents and 15% of staff have received the new vaccine (Figure 1). In comparison, at the same point in time last year, 50% of residents and 22% of staff had received the updated vaccine. Those rates represent the share that received the newly available COVID-19 vaccines, 18 weeks after each shot was made available to the public. These rates are much lower than the 87% of residents and 88% of staff who received their primary vaccination series when measured in September 2022. On January 1, 2024, the CDC changed the way it collects data to calculate the percent of staff who are up to date with their COVID-19 vaccination. CMS reports that it may take facilities some time to adapt to the new methodology.

Uptake of the current COVID-19 vaccine is higher in non-profit facilities than in for-profit or government facilities (Figure 2). The percentage of nursing facility residents who received the updated vaccine is 46% in non-profit facilities compared with 35% in for-profit facilities and 43% in government facilities. Uptake of the fall 2022 vaccine was also highest in non-profit facilities and lowest in for-profit facilities. Rates of vaccine uptake for nursing facility staff were low in all types of facilities with minimal variation across facility types (data not shown).

The percentage of nursing facility residents who received the latest COVID-19 vaccine ranges from 20% in Arizona to 63% in Vermont and North Dakota (Figure 3). In eleven states, half or more of nursing facility residents received the newest vaccine while in two states, 25% or fewer have received the most recent vaccine. Uptake among staff of the most recent vaccine ranges from 5% in Arkansas to 51% in Washington D.C. In 42 states, fewer than 20% of staff have received the most recent vaccine. There are a number of factors that may contribute to the variation in nursing facility vaccine uptake across states including ownership patterns and partisanship, with higher rates in states that have more non-profit facilities and states that voted for President Biden in 2020. Other factors include whether facilities have established programs to keep residents current on their vaccines and the success of those various programs. Additionally, some state variation in staff rates may be attributed to variation in how facilities are adapting to new CMS reporting methodology for staff vaccinations.

Federal vaccine clinics contributed to high initial vaccination rates among nursing facility residents, but without ongoing federal initiatives, uptake of vaccines among nursing facility residents may remain low and vary across facilities. Earlier KFF analysis found that nearly 90% of residents completed the initial COVID-19 vaccination series. High take-up of the primary vaccine series stems from high death rates among nursing facility residents, which contributed to a fear of contracting COVID-19, and a concerted policy effort to vaccinate nursing facility residents, including through federally supported on-site vaccination clinics. According to AARP, federal supports have ended and long-term care facilities now coordinate their own COVID-19 vaccination programs, contributing to greater variation across facilities and lower overall rates.

Recent KFF polling shows that over half of previously vaccinated adults are not worried about getting COVID-19, suggesting that uptake of vaccines among nursing facility staff may remain low in the absence of federal mandates. Among nursing facility staff, initial take-up of COVID-19 vaccines was low until a health care worker vaccination mandate required providers that participate in Medicare and/or Medicaid to be vaccinated. This mandate was not updated to include follow-up vaccines, which may contribute to lower uptake of new vaccines among staff, particularly as concern about contracting COVID-19 drops among the U.S, population more broadly.

As winter viruses circulate, COVID-19 vaccines may help decrease sickness and preventable deaths among nursing facility residents and staff. Though people living and working in nursing facilities have likely built some immunity against COVID-19 through prior vaccinations and natural immunity, periodic vaccines have been shown to decrease mortality and increase antibody concentrations among nursing facility residents. For older adultswho constitute most people who use nursing facilitiesthe risks of COVID-19 may be seven times higher than that of the flu. The CDC finds that 72% of residents had received the flu vaccine as of December 10, 2023, among the small number of nursing facilities that had reported such data, a rate that is nearly twice that of the most recent COVID-19 vaccine. Beyond the flu and COVID-19, RSV is another high-risk respiratory virus. Although there is a new vaccine for RSV, uptake of the new vaccine among nursing facility residents has been hampered by shortages of RSV vaccines and the prioritization of the vaccine for infants and high-risk children. Increasing access to all vaccinations for this population may be a key strategy to preventing respiratory illnesses.

Follow this link:

Few Nursing Facility Residents and Staff Have Received the Latest COVID-19 Vaccine | KFF - KFF

Review Article By Misinformation Spreaders Misleads About mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines – FactCheck.org

February 19, 2024

SciCheck Digest

The mRNA COVID-19 vaccines have a good safety record and have saved millions of lives. But viral posts claim the contrary, citing a recent peer-reviewed article authored by known COVID-19 misinformation spreaders and published in a controversial journal. The paper repeats previously debunked claims.

How safe are the COVID-19 vaccines?

More thanhalf a billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines have now been administered in the U.S. and only a few, very rare, safety concerns have emerged. The vast majority of people experience only minor, temporary side effects such as pain at the injection site, fatigue, headache, or muscle pain or no side effects at all. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said, these vaccines have undergone and will continue to undergo the most intensive safety monitoring in U.S. history.

A small number of severe allergic reactions known as anaphylaxis, which are expected with any vaccine, have occurred with the authorized and approved COVID-19 vaccines. Fortunately, these reactions are rare, typically occur within minutes of inoculation and can be treated. Approximately 5 per million people vaccinated have experienced anaphylaxis after a COVID-19 vaccine, accordingto the CDC.

To make sure serious allergic reactions can be identified and treated, all people receiving a vaccine should be observed for 15 minutes after getting a shot, and anyone who has experienced anaphylaxis or had any kind of immediate allergic reaction to any vaccine or injection in the past should be monitored for a half hour. People who have had a serious allergic reaction to a previous dose or one of the vaccine ingredients should not be immunized. Also, those who shouldnt receive one type of COVID-19 vaccine should be monitored for 30 minutes after receiving a different type of vaccine.

There is evidence that the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna mRNA vaccines may rarely cause inflammation of the heart muscle (myocarditis) or of the surrounding lining (pericarditis), particularly in male adolescents and young adults.

Based on data collected through August 2021, the reporting rates of either condition in the U.S. are highest in males 16 to 17 years old after the second dose (105.9 cases per million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine), followed by 12- to 15-year-old males (70.7 cases per million). The rate for 18- to 24-year-old males was 52.4 cases and 56.3 cases per million doses of Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, respectively.

Health officials have emphasized that vaccine-related myocarditis and pericarditis cases are rare and the benefits of vaccination still outweigh the risks. Early evidence suggests these myocarditis cases are less severe than typical ones. The CDC has also noted that most patients who were treated responded well to medicine and rest and felt better quickly.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine has been linked to anincreased risk of rare blood clots combined with low levels of blood platelets, especially in women ages 30to 49. Early symptoms of the condition, which is known as thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome, or TTS, can appear as late as three weeks after vaccination andincludesevere or persistent headaches or blurred vision, leg swelling, and easy bruising or tiny blood spots under the skin outside of the injection site.

According to the CDC, TTS has occurred in around 4 people per million doses administered. As of early April,the syndrome has been confirmed in 60 cases, including nine deaths, after more than 18.6 million doses of the J&J vaccine. Although TTS remains rare, because of the availability of mRNA vaccines, which are not associated with this serious side effect, the FDA on May 5 limited authorized use of the J&J vaccine to adults who either couldnt get one of the other authorized or approved COVID-19 vaccines because of medical or access reasons, or only wanted a J&J vaccine for protection against the disease. Several months earlier, on Dec. 16, 2021,the CDC had recommended the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna shots over J&Js.

The J&J vaccine has also been linked to an increased risk of Guillain-Barr Syndrome, a rare disorder in which the immune system attacks nerve cells.Most peoplewho develop GBS fully recover, although some have permanent nerve damage and the condition can be fatal.

Safety surveillance data suggest that compared with the mRNA vaccines, which have not been linked to GBS, the J&J vaccine is associated with 15.5 additional GBS cases per million doses of vaccine in the three weeks following vaccination. Most reported cases following J&J vaccination have occurred in men 50 years old and older.

Link to this

Thesafetyof the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna is supported by the rigorous clinical trials run prior to their release and numerous studies conducted since. Hundreds of millions of people have been vaccinated in the U.S., many with multiple doses, and serious side effects are rare.

COVID-19 vaccines have also been shown to beeffectivein reducing the risk of severe forms of the disease. Multiple studies have estimated that the COVID-19 vaccines saved millions of lives across the globe.

But anarticle written by misinformation spreaders who oppose COVID-19 vaccination that claims to have reviewed the original trials and other relevant studies largely ignores this body of evidence. Instead, the review, which calls for a global moratorium on the mRNA vaccines, cites multiple flawed or criticized studies manyofwhichwevewritten aboutbefore to falsely claim the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines have caused extensive, well-documented serious adverse events and have killed nearly 14 times as many people as they saved.

The article was peer-reviewed and published in Cureus, an open-access online medical journalthat prioritizes fast publication and has published problematic studies before,as we will explain.

Update, Feb. 19: In a Substack post, one of the papers authors announced that he had been informed by the journal that the editors had decided to retract the article, based on an internal review that found multiple instances of data misrepresentation and incorrect or unsubstantiated claims.

Socialmediapoststhat share the incorrect conclusions of the review have gone viral.

mRNA COVID-19 vaccines caused more deaths than saved: study, reads a Feb. 4Instagram postthat shared a screenshot of a headline by the Epoch Times.

One author of the review as well as other social media users are also using the fact that the paper was published as proof that the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are unsafe.

People have said Im a misinformation spreader because sinceMay 2021, I have been publicly saying the COVID vaccines are not safe. Now the medical peer-reviewed literature shows I was right.Do you believe me now? Steve Kirsch, a review co-author and a former tech entrepreneur who lacks biomedical training, said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Jan. 30 (emphasis is his).

!!TRUST THE #SCIENCE!!, the author of aviral postwrote on Instagram on Feb. 7. The post included a screenshot of a news story titled Mainstream science mulls global moratorium on COVID vaccines as cancers rise, boosters flub, and the statement Covid vaccines *may* cause cancer. You dont say.

Just because a paper is published does not make it correct. While peer review is useful in weeding out bad science, its not foolproof, and the rigor and processes vary by journal. This review, which many experts have criticized, is an outlier, not mainstream science. And aswevewritten, theres no evidence mRNA COVID-19 vaccines cause cancer and resulted in millions of deaths.

Many of the reviews authors have a history of spreading COVID-19 or vaccine misinformation.This includes Kirsch, who has repeatedly pushed the incorrect idea that the COVID-19 vaccines have killed millions of people worldwide, as well as Dr. Peter McCullough, Stephanie Seneff and Jessica Rose.

McCullough stillrecommendstreating COVID-19 patients with hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, even though both have been shown not to work against the disease. He also promotes and sells spike protein detoxification products for people who have been vaccinated, despite no evidence that vaccinated people need any such detox.

Seneff is a computer scientist who has promoted the false notion that vaccines cause autism. She previously co-authored a review paper with McCullough, which the Cureus review cites, that misused data from the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System to baselessly claim the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines suppress the innate immune system, as wereported. Rose has also beenaccusedof misusing VAERS data to claim vaccines are not safe a common deception among the anti-vaccination community.

The Cureus review cites and even republishes a figure from one of Roses Substack posts about the supposedly alarming number of VAERS reports for autoimmune disorders following COVID-19 vaccination compared with influenza vaccines. The review claims the increased reporting represents an immense safety signal. But as weve explainedbefore, the higher number of VAERS reports for the COVID-19 vaccines can be explained by multiple factors, such as increased awareness and stricter reporting requirements and does not in and of itself constitute a safety signal. A report can be submitted by anyone and does not mean that a vaccine caused a particular problem.

The review paper, titled COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines: Lessons Learned from the Registrational Trials and Global Vaccination Campaign, repeats many claims weve already written about, based on studies or analyses that have been widely criticized or debunked.

To claim the vaccines cause serious harms to humans, for example, the review draws on a problematic reanalysis of the adverse events reported in the original trials that was published in the journal Vaccine in 2022. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Dr. Joseph Ladapo, the states surgeon general, have cited the paper to argue that the vaccines are too risky. But aswevewritten and is detailed in a commentary article published in the same journal the paper has multiple methodological flaws, including how it counted the adverse events.

The review also uncritically cites an unpublished analysis by former physics professor Denis Rancourt that alleged that some 17 million people died from the COVID-19 vaccines. We recently explained that the report erroneously ignored deaths from COVID-19 and that such estimates are implausible. And the review recycles unsupported claims about high levels of DNA contamination in the mRNA vaccines and the possibility that such DNA fragments will integrate into the human genome and cause cancer. As weve detailed, trace amounts of residual DNA are expected in vaccines, but there is no evidence the DNA can alter a persons DNA or cause cancer.

Finally, the review highlighted findings from a Cleveland Clinic observational study that it called the best evidence for the failure of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines ability to confer protection against COVID-19. The study, which identified a correlation between more COVID-19 vaccine doses and a higher rate of testing positive for a coronavirus infection, has frequently been cited by those opposed to vaccination. But asweveexplained, the finding runs counter to that of many other studies, which have generally found increased protection with more doses. And the paper did not demonstrate that more doses actually cause an increased risk of infection. In fact, many experts suspect that the association is likely the result of other differences between people who received a different number of doses. Moreover, the primary purpose of vaccination is to protect against severe disease and there is abundant evidence that the COVID-19 vaccines have been very successful on that front.

Lessons learned? More like conspiracies spun, wrote surgical oncologist Dr.David Gorskiin apostabout the review in his blog Respectful Insolence.

The authors of the review have also been criticized for citing their own studies in the review and for including non-scientific publications as primary sources.

BTW, the McCullough, Kirsch, etc. Cureus paper that is purportedly a scientific review article references trialsitetnews, epoch times, brownstone, the spectator, childrens health defense, and conservative review as primary sources for some of their points, as well as 11 substack articles/blogs, a youtube/twitter video, and 2 explicit anti-vaccine books, plus a large number of self-citations from the review authors,Jeffrey S. Morris, director of the division of biostatistics in the department of biostatistics, epidemiology and informatics at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine,wrote on Xon Feb. 1.

Much of the complimentary coverage of the review paper by some of the usual misinformation spreaders has emphasized that it was published in a peer-reviewed journal.

A review paper published last week in the journal Cureus is the first peer-reviewed paper to call for a global moratorium on the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, declared a Jan. 29articlepublished on Robert F. Kennedys anti-vaccine website, Childrens Health Defense. The story also received attention onsocial media.

Peer review, or the process of having fellow scientists provide feedback on a manuscript and whether it is good enough to publish, can be immensely helpful in ensuring that a given paper does not contain major flaws or errors. But peer review is only as good as the feedback provided and it does not automatically mean the paper can be trusted. Nor are all peer-reviewed journalsthe same, since each has different standards and reputations.

Cureus is unusual in that it focuses on publishing papers quickly and advertises efficient peer review and a hassle-free publishing experience. The journals metrics for the last six months indicate that the average time from submission to publication is 33 days and that the acceptance rate is 51%. For context, the prestigious journalNature which some posts have misleadingly likened Cureus to, as they share the same parent publisher has a median time of 267 days for submission to acceptance and an 8%acceptance rate. Per thearticle informationfor this review paper, the peer-review process took77days.

In 2015, responding to concerns about the journal and its fast peer-review process, the founder, president and co-editor-in-chief of Cureus, Dr. John R. Adler, said that by design peer rejection is not a big part of our review process, and that the journal also relies on post-publication review to sort out what is quality/important.

A paper by Emory University librarians that was presented at a 2022 conference classified Cureus as potentially untrustworthy or predatory. The journal is available on PubMed Central, the National Institutes of Healths database of biomedical research, but is not indexed on MEDLINE, which requires some vetting for inclusion. (A papers appearance in either database does not imply any kind of endorsement by the NIH.)

Cureus, notably, publishedtwo problematicstudies about ivermectin for COVID-19in 2022. As we reported at the time, the results of the studies were inconsistent with stronger studies that did not find any benefit of using ivermectin for COVID-19. Both studies had methodological flaws and were authored by ivermectin activists a fact that was not disclosedat the time of publication.

Although even the best journals occasionally retract published studies, Cureus has ended upmultipletimesin the pages of Retraction Watch, a blog and online database of retractions most recently on Jan. 26 for56 studiesretracted for faked authorship nearly two years after they were first flagged. In 2022, Retraction Watchreportedthat a study retracted by Frontiers in Medicine was later updated and published in Cureus.

Editors note: SciChecks articles providing accurate health information and correcting health misinformation are made possible by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The foundation has no control over FactCheck.orgs editorial decisions, and the views expressed in our articles do not necessarily reflect the views of the foundation.

Safety of COVID-19 Vaccines. CDC. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

Selected Adverse Events Reported after COVID-19 Vaccination. CDC. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness Update. CDC. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

Van Beusekom, Mary. Global COVID vaccination saved 2.4 million lives in first 8 months, study estimates. CIDRAP, University of Minnesota. 31 Oct 2023.

Watson, Oliver J., et al. Global impact of the first year of COVID-19 vaccination: a mathematical modelling study. Infectious Diseases. 23 Jun 2022.

Trang, Brittany. Covid vaccines averted 3 million deaths in U.S., according to new study. Stat. 13 Dec 2022.

COVID-19 vaccinations have saved more than 1.4 million lives in the WHO European Region, a new study finds. WHO. Press release. 16 Jan 2024.

Mead, M. Nathaniel, et al. COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines: Lessons Learned from the Registrational Trials and Global Vaccination Campaign. Cureus. 24 Jan 2024.

Yandell, Kate. Tucker Carlson Video Spreads Falsehoods on COVID-19 Vaccines, WHO Accord. FactCheck.org. 12 Jan 2024.

Yandell, Kate. Faulty Science Underpins Florida Surgeon Generals Call to Halt mRNA COVID-19 Vaccination. FactCheck.org. 5 Jan 2024.

Jaramillo, Catalina. mRNA Vaccines Protect Against COVID-19 Mortality, Contrary to Misleading Posts. FactCheck.org. 26 May 2023.

Jaramillo, Catalina. COVID-19 Vaccine Benefits Outweigh Small Risks, Contrary to Flawed Claim From U.K. Cardiologist. FactCheck.org. 8 May 2023.

Yandell, Kate. Cleveland Clinic Study Did Not Show Vaccines Increase COVID-19 Risk. FactCheck.org. 16 Jun 2023.

Jaramillo, Catalina. Autopsy Study Doesnt Show COVID-19 Vaccines Are Unsafe. FactCheck.org. 21 Dec 2022.

Swann, Sara. Experts say mRNA COVID-19 vaccines have saved millions of lives, not caused mass deaths. PolitiFact. 9 Feb 2024.

Wong, Adrian. COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines Lessons Learned Fact Check! Techarp. 30 Jan 2024.

Gorski, David. Antivaxxers write about lessons learned but know nothing. Respectful Insolence. 26 Jan 2024.

McDonald, Jessica. Flawed Analysis of New Zealand Data Doesnt Show COVID-19 Vaccines Killed Millions. FactCheck.org. 15 Dec 2024.

Yandell, Kate. COVID-19 Vaccines Save Lives, Are Not More Lethal Than COVID-19. FactCheck.org. 6 Nov 2023.

Yandell, Kate. Posts Push Unproven Spike Protein Detoxification Regimen. FactCheck.org. 21 Sep 2023.

Jaramillo, Catalina. Clinical Trials Show Ivermectin Does Not Benefit COVID-19 Patients, Contrary to Social Media Claims. FactCheck.org. 15 Sep 2022.

Robertson, Lori. No New Revelation on Hydroxychloroquine and COVID-19. FactCheck.org. 2 Jul 2021.

McDonald, Jessica. COVID-19 Vaccination Increases Immunity, Contrary to Immune Suppression Claims. FactCheck.org. 29 Jul 2022.

Gorski, David. 2021: The year the weaponization of VAERS went mainstream. Respectful Insolence. 27 Dec 2021.

McDonald, Jessica. What VAERS Can and Cant Do, and How Anti-Vaccination Groups Habitually Misuse Its Data. FactCheck.org. 6 Jun 2023.

Fraiman, Joseph. Serious adverse events of special interest following mRNA COVID-19 vaccination in randomized trials in adults. Vaccine. 22 Sep 2022.

McDonald, Jessica, and Catalina Jaramillo. DeSantis Dubious COVID-19 Vaccine Claims. FactCheck.org. 2 May 2023.

Black, Steven, and Stephen Evans. Serious adverse events following mRNA vaccination in randomized trials in adults. Vaccine. 26 May 2023.

Yandell, Kate. Posts Spread False Claim About Moderna Patent Application. FactCheck.org. 22 Nov 2023.

Yandell, Kate. COVID-19 Vaccines Have Not Been Shown to Alter DNA, Cause Cancer. FactCheck.org. 26 Oct 2023.

Yandell, Kate. Faulty Science Underpins Florida Surgeon Generals Call to Halt mRNA COVID-19 Vaccination. FactCheck.org. 5 Jan 2024.

Jaramillo, Catalina, and Kate Yandell. RFK Jr.s COVID-19 Deceptions. FactCheck.org. 11 Aug 2023.

Morris, Jeffrey (@jsm2334) BTW, the McCullough, Kirsch, etc. Cureus paper that is purportedly a scientific review article references trialsitetnews, epoch times, brownstone, the spectator, childrens health defense, and conservative review as primary sources for some of their points, as well as 11 substack articles/blogs, a youtube/twitter video, and 2 explicit anti-vaccine books, plus a large number of self-citations from the review authors. X. 1 Feb 2024.

Scrutinizing science: Peer review. Understanding Science 101. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

Crossley, Merlin. When to trust (and not to trust) peer reviewed science. The Conversation. 12 Jul 2018.

Reviewer Guide. Cureus. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

About Cureus. Cureus. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

Journal Metrics. Nature. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

Editorial criteria and processes. Nature. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

Sparks, Katie, and Kimberly R. Powell. Assessing Predatory Journal Publishing Within Health Sciences Authors. SLA conference. 31 Jul 2022.

MEDLINE, PubMed, and PMC (PubMed Central): How are they different? NIH. 28 Dec 2023.

Disclaimer. National Library of Medicine. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.

Some Strange Goings On at Cureus. Emerald City Journal. 20 Aug 2016.

Oransky, Ivan. Journal retracts more than 50 studies from Saudi Arabia for faked authorship. Retraction Watch. 26 Jan 2024.

Kincaid, Ellie. Researcher attacks journal for retracting his paper on COVID-19 drug. Retraction Watch. 26 Jan 2024. 10 Jun 2022.

Jaramillo, Catalina. Evidence Still Lacking to Support Ivermectin as Treatment for COVID-19. FactCheck.org. 6 Jun 2022.

Jaramillo, Catalina. Clinical Trials Show Ivermectin Does Not Benefit COVID-19 Patients, Contrary to Social Media Claims. FactCheck.org. 15 Sep 2022.

Kerr, Lucy, et al. Correction: Ivermectin Prophylaxis Used for COVID-19: A Citywide, Prospective, Observational Study of 223,128 Subjects Using Propensity Score Matching. Cureus. 24 Mar 2022.

See the original post here:

Review Article By Misinformation Spreaders Misleads About mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines - FactCheck.org

Paper claiming ‘extensive’ harms of COVID-19 vaccines to be retracted – Retraction Watch

February 19, 2024

A journal is retracting a paper on the purported harms of vaccines against COVID-19 written in part by authors who have had similar work retracted before.

The article, COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines: Lessons Learned from the Registrational Trials and Global Vaccination Campaign, appeared late last month in Cureus, which used to be a stand-alone journal but is now owned by Springer Nature.(It has appeared frequently in these pages.)

Graham Parker, Director of Publishing and Customer Success at Cureus, told Retraction Watch:

I can confirm we will be retracting it by the end of the week, as we have provided the authors with a deadline to reply and indicate whether they agree or disagree with the retraction.

The senior author on the work was Peter McCullough, a cardiologist at the Institute of Pure and Applied Knowledge who lost his board certification after the American Board of Internal Medicine found he had provided false or inaccurate medical information to the public.

Indeed, McCullough had already lost one paper, in Current Problems in Cardiology, from Elsevier, when he and his colleagues submitted their latest opus to Cureus. And SSRN, which hosts preprints for The Lancet, another Elsevier journal, had removed work by him and colleagues claiming large numbers of deaths from COVID-19 vaccines.

A few days after the paper appeared, we asked John Adler Jr., the editor in chief of Cureus, if the track record of the authors concerned him. His response seemed to admit to the risk, but he also defended the journals vetting of the paper:

Yes I am aware that many of these authors are skeptical zealots when it comes to the dangers of vaccines. Our editorial response was extra vigilance during the peer review process with 8 different reviewers weighing in on publication or not, including a few with strong statistics knowledge. Therefore, a credible peer review process was followed and the chips fell where they may. That is all I can say. If you or other readers were to note fatal flaws in this article now that it is published, i.e. failure to accurately report financial COIs [conflicts of interest], totally erroneous statistical analysis, fake data etc. we will of course re-evaluate at any time.

Adler then took a jab at other journals:

The decision process Cureus made, contrasts sharply with Elseviers seeming editorial decision to just censor the article using ad hominem concerns.

In a Feb. 9, 2024 letter to the journal and the publisher, John P. Moore, a microbiologist at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City, and Gregg Gonsalves, an epidemiologist at Yale School of Public Health, in New Haven, Conn., expressed their serious concerns about the article. Among their objections:

The authors utterly lack relevant professional qualifications that would enable them to assess the scientific publications they draw on and/or attempt to criticize. The authors self-describe their affiliations under the rubric of Independent Research, or list private foundations, or in one case report an academic discipline unrelated to biology. In short, the authors cannot draw on years of training in biological science, but appear to be self-taught via the University of Google.

They continue:

The point here is that the Cureus review merely regurgitates claims about mRNA vaccines that have circulated on the internet and been debunked over and over again, including by fact-checking organizations (e.g., Factcheck.org, and the USA Today and Politico factcheck teams).

They conclude:

By bringing this highly problematic review to your attention, we hope that you will conduct a thorough review of how it was accepted for publication in Cureus under the Springer Nature imprimatur. How appropriate was the peer review process? How did the editor act? Is the acceptance of this review symptomatic of a wider problem at the journal? Finally, if you share our views that this review is so flawed as to be dangerous to public health, you may well decide that it should be retracted.

Springer Nature had apparently been looking into the case already, and ended up agreeing with Moore, Gonsalves and other critics of the article.

Steve Kirsch, a co-author of the paper, announced the retraction on his Substack over the weekend:

The paper I co-authored with 6 other authors will be retracted by the journal because the publisher wont allow any paper that is counter-narrative to be published.

According to Kirschs post, Springer Natures inquiry found:

a significant number of concerns with your article that in our view cant be remedied with a correction. The concerns include, but are not limited to:

Waving the white flag, a bowed but unbroken Kirsch wrote:

It doesnt do any good to show them these reasons are all bogus. The laundry list of items is simply a placeholder to make it look like the journal is following the science.

Nothing we can say on appeal will make any difference.

The decision was made to retract the paper and facts dont matter. Its about supporting the narrative. When they write in our view cant be remedied with a correction it means dont even bother arguing with us, your paper is retracted.

For his part, Moore said:

The journal and publisher responded courteously and professionally to our letter, and I was pleased by the final outcome. They did what needed to be done.

Like Retraction Watch? You can make atax-deductible contribution to support our work,subscribe to our freedaily digestorpaid weekly update,follow uson Twitter, like uson Facebook, or add us to yourRSS reader. If you find a retraction thatsnot in The Retraction Watch Database, you canlet us know here. For comments or feedback, email us at team@retractionwatch.com.

Read more here:

Paper claiming 'extensive' harms of COVID-19 vaccines to be retracted - Retraction Watch

Study of 99 million COVID-vaccinated people finds links to brain, heart problems – Washington Times

February 19, 2024

In what stands as one of the most comprehensive vaccine safety studies across the globe, scientists have singled out unusual conditions that have surfaced after receiving COVID-19 vaccinations.

The study of 99 million vaccinated people in eight countries found a slight increase in heart inflammation cases following shots from Pfizer and Moderna, both mRNA vaccines.

Simultaneously, the AstraZeneca vaccine, which uses a different technology known as a viral vector, has been associated with a rare brain blood clot disorder.

The AstraZeneca vaccine has also been linked to a higher risk of Guillain-Barre syndrome, a neurological disorder that can sometimes lead to muscle weakness and, in rare instances, paralysis.

These findings are particularly significant against the backdrop of the 13.5 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines administered globally to date an undertaking that has played a critical role in preserving lives during the pandemic.

The Global Vaccine Data Networks exhaustive research, detailed in the scholarly journal Vaccine, provides expansive insight into the matter. The networks publication, equipped with easy-to-navigate dashboards, transparently presents both its research methodology and the conclusions drawn for public examination.

The analysts involved in this study examined health data of 99 million individuals, primarily focused on 13 specific conditions considered to be of special interest for vaccine safety.

Evidence of myocarditis, which is inflammation of the heart muscle, was particularly recurrent among individuals after their first, second, or booster dose of an mRNA vaccine.

Modest spikes in incidence were noted especially following the administration of the second dose of the Moderna shot, which was also tied to a raised occurrence of pericarditis a swelling of the tissue surrounding the heart after initial and booster vaccinations.

A significant increase in the cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome was observed within 42 days of receiving the initial dose of AstraZenecas vaccine, also known as Vaxzevria.

The study documented an increase to 190 cases from the forecasted 66 based on natural incidence rates.

An uptick in cases of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, an exceptionally rare type of cerebral clot, led to the restriction, or even discontinuation of the use of AstraZenecas vaccine in a number of countries, including Denmark.

Furthermore, a connection between this vaccine and myocarditis after the third dose was noted in specific demographics, albeit not as a widespread issue.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

Washington Times Staff can be reached at 202-636-3000.

Visit link:

Study of 99 million COVID-vaccinated people finds links to brain, heart problems - Washington Times

Rare Side Effects of COVID-19 Vaccines: A Comprehensive Study Reveals Insights – BNN Breaking

February 19, 2024

In an era where the world grapples with the aftermath and ongoing challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the scientific community's relentless pursuit of answers brings to light findings of paramount importance. A recent extensive study, hailed as the largest of its kind, has meticulously mapped the terrain of vaccine safety, uncovering rare but significant side effects linked to various COVID-19 vaccines. Among these, heart-related inflammations such as myocarditis and pericarditis, along with blood clots including cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, stand out as concerns that warrant attention.

Delving deeper into the fabric of these findings, the study unveils an increased risk of Guillain-Barre syndrome and other neurological conditions like transverse myelitis and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis post-vaccination. These revelations come from a self-controlled case series focusing on the association between Pfizer/Moderna vaccination and thrombotic events among healthcare workers. It was discovered that there is a heightened risk of thrombosis following the initial two doses of vaccination, shedding light on the nuanced interplay between vaccine administration and the subsequent emergence of these rare side effects.

Furthermore, the study underscores the phenomenon of chronic post-vaccination syndrome, characterized by a constellation of symptoms that persist well beyond the immediate aftermath of vaccination. This highlights an urgent need for ongoing research to enhance vaccine safety protocols and mitigate the distress experienced by those affected.

At the heart of this study are the experiences of 1,575 healthcare workers, with a prominent representation from the age groups of 30-40 in women and 40-50 in men. Among them, a notable percentage had pre-existing conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, and asthma. The vaccines predominantly administered were Sputnik V and Oxford-AstraZeneca, with the majority of side effects manifesting within the first 24 hours post-vaccination. The most common adverse reactions were injection site pain and myalgia, yet post-vaccine COVID-19 infection was reported in a minority of 4.2% of cases, underscoring the vaccines' role in mitigating the risk of severe disease.

The study also delves into the critical aspect of thromboembolism risk, which appears to be modulated by prior vaccination status. Intriguingly, vaccinated individuals exhibited a lower risk, pointing to the vaccines' efficacy not only in lowering infection rates but also in reducing the likelihood of thromboembolic events.

In the unfolding narrative of COVID-19 and its vaccines, this comprehensive study serves as a crucial checkpoint. It not only brings to the forefront the rare side effects associated with vaccination but also emphasizes the vaccines' instrumental role in curbing the pandemic's spread and severity. The findings advocate for a balanced understanding, recognizing the imperative to safeguard public health while diligently working to refine vaccine safety.

In light of these revelations, the global community stands at a crossroads, equipped with knowledge that both cautions and guides. As research continues to evolve, the collective goal remains unwavering: to navigate the complexities of this pandemic with resilience, ensuring that the journey toward a safer tomorrow is informed by the lessons of today.

See the rest here:

Rare Side Effects of COVID-19 Vaccines: A Comprehensive Study Reveals Insights - BNN Breaking

VOTE: Do you plan on getting a Covid booster? – The National Desk

February 19, 2024

VOTE: Do you plan on getting a Covid booster?

by The National Desk

FILE - A nurse administers a Moderna COVID-19 booster vaccine at an inoculation station next to Jackson State University in Jackson, Miss., Friday, Nov. 18, 2022. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Do you plan on getting a Covid booster? Vote in the poll above or click here.

Read the original here:

VOTE: Do you plan on getting a Covid booster? - The National Desk

Vaccine concerns prompt Wyoming blood-labeling bill, but experts say there’s no scientific basis – Wyoming Tribune

February 19, 2024

State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington Washington D.C. West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Puerto Rico US Virgin Islands Armed Forces Americas Armed Forces Pacific Armed Forces Europe Northern Mariana Islands Marshall Islands American Samoa Federated States of Micronesia Guam Palau Alberta, Canada British Columbia, Canada Manitoba, Canada New Brunswick, Canada Newfoundland, Canada Nova Scotia, Canada Northwest Territories, Canada Nunavut, Canada Ontario, Canada Prince Edward Island, Canada Quebec, Canada Saskatchewan, Canada Yukon Territory, Canada

Zip Code

Country United States of America US Virgin Islands United States Minor Outlying Islands Canada Mexico, United Mexican States Bahamas, Commonwealth of the Cuba, Republic of Dominican Republic Haiti, Republic of Jamaica Afghanistan Albania, People's Socialist Republic of Algeria, People's Democratic Republic of American Samoa Andorra, Principality of Angola, Republic of Anguilla Antarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S) Antigua and Barbuda Argentina, Argentine Republic Armenia Aruba Australia, Commonwealth of Austria, Republic of Azerbaijan, Republic of Bahrain, Kingdom of Bangladesh, People's Republic of Barbados Belarus Belgium, Kingdom of Belize Benin, People's Republic of Bermuda Bhutan, Kingdom of Bolivia, Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana, Republic of Bouvet Island (Bouvetoya) Brazil, Federative Republic of British Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago) British Virgin Islands Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria, People's Republic of Burkina Faso Burundi, Republic of Cambodia, Kingdom of Cameroon, United Republic of Cape Verde, Republic of Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad, Republic of Chile, Republic of China, People's Republic of Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia, Republic of Comoros, Union of the Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, People's Republic of Cook Islands Costa Rica, Republic of Cote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of the Cyprus, Republic of Czech Republic Denmark, Kingdom of Djibouti, Republic of Dominica, Commonwealth of Ecuador, Republic of Egypt, Arab Republic of El Salvador, Republic of Equatorial Guinea, Republic of Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Faeroe Islands Falkland Islands (Malvinas) Fiji, Republic of the Fiji Islands Finland, Republic of France, French Republic French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon, Gabonese Republic Gambia, Republic of the Georgia Germany Ghana, Republic of Gibraltar Greece, Hellenic Republic Greenland Grenada Guadaloupe Guam Guatemala, Republic of Guinea, Revolutionary People's Rep'c of Guinea-Bissau, Republic of Guyana, Republic of Heard and McDonald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras, Republic of Hong Kong, Special Administrative Region of China Hrvatska (Croatia) Hungary, Hungarian People's Republic Iceland, Republic of India, Republic of Indonesia, Republic of Iran, Islamic Republic of Iraq, Republic of Ireland Israel, State of Italy, Italian Republic Japan Jordan, Hashemite Kingdom of Kazakhstan, Republic of Kenya, Republic of Kiribati, Republic of Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Kuwait, State of Kyrgyz Republic Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon, Lebanese Republic Lesotho, Kingdom of Liberia, Republic of Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Liechtenstein, Principality of Lithuania Luxembourg, Grand Duchy of Macao, Special Administrative Region of China Macedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of Madagascar, Republic of Malawi, Republic of Malaysia Maldives, Republic of Mali, Republic of Malta, Republic of Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania, Islamic Republic of Mauritius Mayotte Micronesia, Federated States of Moldova, Republic of Monaco, Principality of Mongolia, Mongolian People's Republic Montserrat Morocco, Kingdom of Mozambique, People's Republic of Myanmar Namibia Nauru, Republic of Nepal, Kingdom of Netherlands Antilles Netherlands, Kingdom of the New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua, Republic of Niger, Republic of the Nigeria, Federal Republic of Niue, Republic of Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands Norway, Kingdom of Oman, Sultanate of Pakistan, Islamic Republic of Palau Palestinian Territory, Occupied Panama, Republic of Papua New Guinea Paraguay, Republic of Peru, Republic of Philippines, Republic of the Pitcairn Island Poland, Polish People's Republic Portugal, Portuguese Republic Puerto Rico Qatar, State of Reunion Romania, Socialist Republic of Russian Federation Rwanda, Rwandese Republic Samoa, Independent State of San Marino, Republic of Sao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic of Saudi Arabia, Kingdom of Senegal, Republic of Serbia and Montenegro Seychelles, Republic of Sierra Leone, Republic of Singapore, Republic of Slovakia (Slovak Republic) Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia, Somali Republic South Africa, Republic of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Spain, Spanish State Sri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic of St. Helena St. Kitts and Nevis St. Lucia St. Pierre and Miquelon St. Vincent and the Grenadines Sudan, Democratic Republic of the Suriname, Republic of Svalbard & Jan Mayen Islands Swaziland, Kingdom of Sweden, Kingdom of Switzerland, Swiss Confederation Syrian Arab Republic Taiwan, Province of China Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic of Thailand, Kingdom of Timor-Leste, Democratic Republic of Togo, Togolese Republic Tokelau (Tokelau Islands) Tonga, Kingdom of Trinidad and Tobago, Republic of Tunisia, Republic of Turkey, Republic of Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu Uganda, Republic of Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom of Great Britain & N. Ireland Uruguay, Eastern Republic of Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of Viet Nam, Socialist Republic of Wallis and Futuna Islands Western Sahara Yemen Zambia, Republic of Zimbabwe

The rest is here:

Vaccine concerns prompt Wyoming blood-labeling bill, but experts say there's no scientific basis - Wyoming Tribune

Oregon Health Authority stresses though COVID-19 cases are ‘coming down,’ there’s still need for vaccinations – KGW.com

February 19, 2024

PORTLAND, Ore. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) eyes easing its five-day isolation policy for those who test positive for COVID-19, the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) had already adopted that practice in May 2023.

The OHA's policy is that someone with COVID-19 doesnt need to stay home for five days.

"Were seeing a lot less severe disease than we had early on in the pandemic, given the amount of people who are vaccinated already, have recovered from COVID-19 or both and had some level of immunity," said Dr. Dean Sidelinger, Oregon's state epidemiologist. "So that is what contributed to our decision back in May."

OHA recommends people now look at symptoms to determine when it is time to stop isolating. With the new approach, the agency said people don't need to stay home if they are fever-free for 24 hours without medication and have mild or improving symptoms.

"COVID can be unpredictable, but so far, we are seeing a slow steady decline," Sidelinger said. "Our vaccines work to protect people from the variants that have emerged over the past couple of years. COVID is coming down, influenza is coming down and RSV is coming down."

As of February, emergency room visits, hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19 are down, according to the latest CDC data.

RELATED: Nearly 10,000 died from COVID-19 in December, fueled by holiday gatherings and new variant, WHO says

To keep this immunity up, OHA said it is important for people to stay up to date on vaccinations, especially when it comes to kids in school.

On Saturday, Multnomah County held a free catch-up clinic for children still needing their immunizations at David Douglas High School. If they dont meet this requirement by Feb. 21, they will be turned away from all schools or daycares.

"We want to make sure that our communities are protected," said Richard Bruno, the Multnomah County Public Health Officer. "We want to have very low-barrier access to vaccines that are needed. We dont check for insurance and have a great supply of vaccines available for anybody who needs it."

For parents who missed Saturday's clinic, they still have another chance to get their children up to date on vaccines. On Feb. 21, Multnomah County will hold its final immunization clinic with CareOregon Boys & Girls Club in Rockwood from 8:30 a.m. to noon.

Meanwhile, the CDC is still recommending that people who test positive for COVID-19 stay home for at least five days and isolate themselves from others in their home. People should also wear a high-quality mask if they have to be around others in their home during the isolation period, according to current guidelines.

Visit link:

Oregon Health Authority stresses though COVID-19 cases are 'coming down,' there's still need for vaccinations - KGW.com

Page 54«..1020..53545556..6070..»