A 61-year-old man got 1 dose of a COVID vaccine and developed severe neuropathy within days. The neuropathy continued for a year until he died of a stroke and massive blood clots. The NIH knows.
Just as a matter of public record, I wanted to point out that Dr. Avindra Nath, who was taking care of the vaccine injured at NIH, now knows of a vaccine-injured man who died a year after a single dose of COVID vaccine. The coroner confirmed the vaccine caused the death. This man was perfectly healthy before the vaccine and his health changed just days later with symptoms consistent with vaccine injured. The blood clots in the autopsy are unique to COVID vaccine recipients and not seen in prior years.
Will the NIH alert the public of this? Of course not. The NIH still hasn’t acknowledged that vaccine-injured people exist. Admitting that they know of a vaccine-injured man who died a year after a single shot would be a stretch for them.
But just because they won’t admit it, it doesn’t stop me from letting you know that they know.
The bottom line is this: the “death window” for the vaccine isn’t days or weeks; it’s at least a year and possibly more. So just because you got your vaccine and are still alive 3 months later, it does not mean that you’re out of the woods.
Does anyone know of anyone who died from the vaccine more than a year from...
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The vaccine window will likely be measured in YEARS. I've seen myocarditis cases due to infections with suspected coxsackie virus. The patient in one case developed an extremely mild case of diagnosed myocarditis while the other had no symptoms. They both died of suspected ventricular tachycardia due to re-entry, the first one died about three years after the myocarditis while the one who was completely asymptomatic died about three months after. Both were doing fine until suddenly found "down". Autopsies suggested myocarditis with fatal arrhythmia leading to cardiac arrest.
ReplyDeleteThe issue with myocarditis is that it doesn't necessarily matter if it is "mild" or "self-limited". Sure, the more severe cases can kill you with the initial illness, but you don't know if you had the death of a large enough "island" of cardiac tissue to cause a fatal arrhythmia until that event occurs. It can happen YEARS later.
That's a freaky comment^^^^^
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