CDC considers adjusting COVID-19 vaccine schedules to lower risk of heart inflammation

Bramblewild

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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering changes to its COVID-19 vaccination schedule to reduce the risk of heart inflammation from mRNA vaccine shots.

During a meeting Friday, members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices presented data that suggests there have been higher rates of myocarditis after receiving an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, especially in young men. Advisory panel chairwoman Dr. Grace Lee said that a longer time period between vaccine doses could be safer and also improve the vaccine's effectiveness, according to the Washington Examiner.
 
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disciple Clint

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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering changes to its COVID-19 vaccination schedule to reduce the risk of heart inflammation from mRNA vaccine shots.

During a meeting Friday, members of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices presented data that suggests there have been higher rates of myocarditis after receiving an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, especially in young men. Advisory panel chairwoman Dr. Grace Lee said that a longer time period between vaccine doses could be safer and also improve the vaccine's effectiveness, according to the Washington Examiner.
So now some of the dangers of the vaccine start to be recognized by the CDC
 
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expos4ever

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Just to be sure the entire picture is clear, here are some direct quotes from an NBC piece on this change:

"Vaccine safety is raised again and again" among some unvaccinated people, said committee member Dr. Matthew Daley, a senior investigator at Kaiser Permanente Colorado. "We have vaccines that are highly effective and have a high degree of safety, but we have a way to make them even safer."

Bill Hanage, a Harvard epidemiologist who is not a member of the committee, said the current dosing schedules were chosen because researchers needed data as quickly as possible.

"Changes to dosing schedules happen all the time," he said. "They don’t mean other schedules were necessarily bad, but that we can’t test all schedules at one time and so we refine them as data accumulate."
 
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disciple Clint

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Where is your actual evidence that the CDC has not been acknowledging the risks of the vaccine?
Seriously, you want evidence that something did not happen? I will do that right after you are able to provide evidence that zombies do not exist, good luck on proving any negative.
 
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Semper-Fi

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Where is your actual evidence that the CDC has not been acknowledging the risks of the vaccine?

The CDC’s VAERS web page, some 1,054,000 adverse reactions to the COVID-19
vaccine have been reported. The reported deaths from the vaccine come a
total of 22,200, and the number of people needing urgent care as a result
of the vaccine has reached 113,800. This is just the people who have reported,
many more has not even bothered to report reactions to vaccines.

No one seems to even pay attention to these figures though.
 
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