Experts in their latest and peer-reviewed study urged the government to suspend the global vaccination of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines as the vaccines pose more harmful effects.
The latest and peer-reviewed study said that the Food and Drug Administration and vaccine makers disregarded the standard safety testing procedures and toxicological criteria. Moreover, the early conclusion of both studies precluded any objective evaluation of potential side effects as there was not enough time for a thorough trial evaluation.
It also said that excess deaths, cardiac events, strokes, and other serious adverse effects (SAEs) have been wrongly attributed to COVID-19 rather than to the COVID-19 mRNA vaccinations since early 2021.
“Misattribution of SAEs to COVID-19 often may be due to the amplification of adverse effects when mRNA injections are followed by SARS-CoV-2 subvariant infection,” the study said.
Finally, experts who conducted the study urged governments to support and impose an international ban on these altered mRNA products until all pertinent inquiries regarding causality, residual DNA, and aberrant protein creation are resolved, in light of the well-established SAEs and the intolerable harm-to-reward ratio. The conclusion of the study is worded this way:
Given the well-documented SAEs and unacceptable harm-to-reward ratio, we urge governments to endorse and enforce a global moratorium on these modified mRNA products until all relevant questions pertaining to causality, residual DNA, and aberrant protein production are answered.
Mead M, Seneff S, Wolfinger R, et al. (January 24, 2024)
(Get back or refresh this page later for more information about the study.)
Source:
Mead M, Seneff S, Wolfinger R, et al. (January 24, 2024) COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines: Lessons Learned from the Registrational Trials and Global Vaccination Campaign. Cureus 16(1): e52876. doi:10.7759/cureus.52876
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Since 2011, Regel Javines has been writing online, sharing news and analysis on a range of noteworthy and urgent social issues. He completed his bachelor’s degree in office administration at the Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP)—Taguig Campus, where he also served as editor-in-chief of the official school newspaper. See Regel’s published articles here.