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Case summary: 24 hrs after receiving her first dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine, a 30-year-old female developed severe headache. Three weeks later she was admitted with subacute headache and confusion. Imaging initially showed scattered cortical thrombosis with an elevated opening pressure on lumbar puncture. An external ventricular drain was placed, but she continued to have elevated intracranial pressure. Ultimately, she required a hemicraniectomy, but intractable cerebral edema resulted in her death. Pathology was consistent with thrombosis and associated inflammatory response.
Though complications are rare...
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Yes! Yes. Yes, absolutely. I received the vaccine within days of its first availability in California. And the second dose I received it right on schedule. I never hesitated. I knew it was a brand new technology, but I thought that the United States CDC and FDA must have done their due diligence before making it available to the public. And that's, that was my reasoning at the time.
So I myself had no adverse reactions to the vaccine. But it was around the spring and summer of 2021, several months later, that I began to notice patients, otherwise healthy, being admitted to the ICU for illnesses that had no other explanation. And, and their symptoms always started with their covid vaccination. That's what was a red flag for me.
So I reported them to VAERS[2] and I expected to hear from medical officers from the federal agencies. But I did not hear back.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: What were the numbers back then? Like, how many people, what made you, when it become, OK, that's odd, then all of a sudden you say, OK, there's something going on here. How long did that take in that process, and how many patients did it take for you to document something unusual?
DR. PATRICIA LEE: I think when I saw my third patient I knew something was up. Because like I said I work the weekends and night time. I'm one doctor in the ICU. If this was truly a rare event, I shouldn't have seen 3 within, I want to say, in 3 months. And these were, again, straightforward and very obvious. You know, they got the vaccine, they started having certain symptoms, and, you know, weeks later, days later, months later, they showed up in my unit. And you can always go back to the hospital chart and then you can trace back their disease onset with the vaccination.
So I reported these cases to VAERS [cat appears on screen] and ah, sorry, excuse me, my cat.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: No, we can have cats and dogs, we can have all kinds of—
DR. PATRICIA LEE: [laughs]
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: — this is low budget podcast. That's all good right there.
DR. PATRICIA LEE: [laughs]
So, I reported to VAERS and I received no report— I received no replies. So I started to search on the Internet. I wanted to see if I was alone in seeing these things. And to my surprise there were whispers of numerous reports, very similar reports on the Internet, on social media. But never mainstream media. And that's really what alarmed me, that the people in the mainstream were not interested.
So I started talking to my colleagues, you know, my medical colleagues. And I'll admit some dismissed my concern as if I was blowing things out of proportion, but many if not most agreed with me that these were very concerning red flags for the vaccine. And then when I spoke with them further some actually said to me that because the benefits outweigh the risks and it was more important to vaccinate everybody, so these adverse events must be accepted.
11:36
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: And I think that's a, and that's a leadway, too, is that we talk about risk versus benefit in everything we do. We say OK, you have X number of people who get damaged, X number of people are saved, then we have to weight, as a physician the risk versus benefit for the patient. And also respect patient autonomy, right? We had—
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Correct.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: —so many issues involved. As you know, just to draw this into what we're talking about, medical ethics and that's why it's so important what we're talking about is that we all knew when we were at USC and I knew going through my training if I had a patient who was Jehovah's Witness, for instance, and I knew they were going to possibly bleed to death,[3] right, and I don't want to have a patient die on me, I would say, hey, you know, is your religion, how strong is it, are you in your faith? And the guideline was, you respect the patient's autonomy, even if they're going to die as a result because that's their religious freedom and their right. And so this vax issue became very difficult for us.
12:32
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Correct. Absolutely. I mean, even to this day all other areas, and frankly all areas, we still, we still advocate informed consent, and we still abide by it. And even if we don't agree with the decision made by the patients, we respect that.
So so, you know it was, so this time, this was the summer of 2021 and this was the time when healthcare mandate was being issued by the federal government and also by the State of California. And I just felt mandating harm to promote the collective good was not the right thing to do. So I tried to do something. And the something that I chose at first was I, I attempted to go up the hospital chain of command. I went up to the hospital leadership. And I spoke with them. And they basically told me that because of the mandate from the government they had to abide by it and there was nothing they could do.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: Were they, were they compassionate with you, saying, hey, we get where you're coming from and we're kind of, or they just kind of blew you off? Or what kind of vibe did you get based on that conversation?
14:08
DR. PATRICIA LEE: They were somewhat compassionate. They said, we understand why you would want to, you know, try to do something. But they basically said that their hands were tied.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: And that's what happened down here. And you know it was funny— not funny, it's tragic, actually, at that time, and, and maybe you can tell people how, what made you reach out to me also, because it's awkward. So I had doctors reaching out to me, saying, I don't know what to do, I don't want to do this, I've seen bad outcomes and I'm concerned, and they're forcing it, I can't lose my, I, I, you know, I have 500,000 dollars, as you and I did going to that darn USC. I just paid off my school loans by the way.
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Congratulations!
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: Thank you, finally. It took me a long time. If I was a intensive, you probably paid them off in a year or two, but you know, as primary care we don't get paid as much. But the point is, when you have that holding over your head, you're like, OK, if I lose my job, and I got all this, I have you know, wife and kids and I have responsibilities, and you're working for a big system, someone like you coming out and saying that, puts you, you put a target on your back for sure. Right?
So, and especially someone like you, and that's why I love your story and it's so much more powerful, is that you, you got vaxxed twice, and you said, look, this is the way out, I believe in this, I trust the government, I trust these people who are telling me it's good, I trust the administration, and then you see the bad outcomes, and you go, uh oh, I have to reassess.
So the problem is people are so quick to say, you're an anti-vaxxer. I was called an anti-vaxxer just because I was low carb, way back in the day—
DR. PATRICIA LEE: [laughs]
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: — before covid was even here. And I was like, that's odd, like, why would you say that? It was really strange, because I've never in my life said, hey, you know. I've had the flu shots, I've had all the, those kinds of vaccinations before. I was like, that's weird. So anyways, that this whole sentiment came out that says, uh oh, if you say anything, you're, you're hurting the cause. The greater good is more important than you saying what you're seeing.
15:52
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Right, right. So, yeah, the hospitals were, you know, at least, they were polite with me, and but they said that their hands were tied and the policy came from the government and they had to abide by it.
So then I tried to contact a number of journalists. So, but, but nobody wanted to take my story.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: You! Come on, you're telling me the mainstream media wasn't interested in your story?
DR. PATRICIA LEE: [laughing]
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: Of what you've seen and what you've documented—
DR. PATRICIA LEE: [laughing] No.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: — with —
DR. PATRICIA LEE: No, they were not.
DR: BRIAN LENZKES: — with actual patients?
DR. PATRICIA LEE: No, they were not.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: [smiling] Hmmm.
16:30
DR. PATRICIA LEE: So then, as a last resort, and frankly, I ended up, as you know, I ended up writing a very public letter. I wrote a letter to the CDC and the FDA. That was back in September of 2021. In the letter I described a number of vaccine-injured patients I had seen. And the letter, they actually tried to ignore my letter at first. They didn't respond to it. But with Aaron Siri's[4] help I was able to make the letter public. And the letter went viral rather quickly, and it called attention of Senator Ron Johnson, who then wrote an, wrote an article in the Washington Examiner[5] and also he wrote a direct letter to the federal agencies pressuring them to meet with me, so that, in fact, less than 2 weeks after the letter went public, I actually had a Zoom meeting with them.
Now just to backtrack a little bit, I do want to mention that I did reach out to you around this time, and this was, what, after 20 plus years of not being in contact with you. So the whole process to me was obviously somewhat terrifying.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: Let's get back for a second. What made you reach out to me?
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Um—
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: What was it that you go, OK—
DR. PATRICIA LEE: So like I said I was combing—
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: Because I think I want people to know that conversation we had.
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Yeah. I was combing through the social media to look for vaccine injury reports, and that's when I started to pay attention to twitter. And I came across your account and just some of the posts that you had posted I realized that you, you were not, you had not completely bought into the government narrative, and you were questioning it. And so I felt you were someone I could trust to confide in. And the reason I needed to even reach out to anyone in particular was that I felt very alone, seeing these patients and, and, you know, being bothered by their suffering, and had no one to turn to. Most of my colleagues I guess had felt the collective good outweighed the individual risks. And—
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: And individual freedoms, too.
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Correct.
19:15
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: And the other thing is, and I'll tell you from my perspective it's funny because my office manager said, hey, this Dr. Lee reach out to, Patricia, I'm like, Dr. Patricia Lee? I went to med school with her, why's she reach— I'm like, that's weird. You know, I'm like, that's weird, I wonder if, I'm making two podcasts, maybe she wants to come on the podcast and talk about what she's doing and— So then we have this awkward conversation. So you're like, hey, Brian, how's life, how's the kids, what's going on? And I'm like, why are you reaching out to me? [laughs] What do you want? And you said, well, ah, the first thing you said was, when's the last time you saw pneumocystis pneumonia?
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Right.
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: PCP pneumonia.[6] Which is an AIDS-defining illness. And I, and I kind of said, well, when I was with you 25 years ago or whatever, because that's what we were seeing back then in, in the AIDS epidemic when it first came out and, and it also made me think, oh, gosh, I remember back then, we were using Bactrim[7] as a drug to treat these people, and then the government said, no, you can't use that drug. And that was the only thing that was working for pneumocystis pneumonia.
But when you said, you know, and I said, hey, I'm, I'm, you know, my practice is outside the big city, I don't see a lot of AIDS patients, right? And you're like, these aren't AIDS patients. That's when I was, I was dumbfounded when you said that.
20:23
DR. PATRICIA LEE: Yeah. Yeah, one of the patients that, that alerted me to vaccine-induced immunosuppression obviously was that, was a patient that was immunocompetent, otherwise healthy gentleman, that came in with PCP. And there was no other explanation.
And I, I, I remember that conversation with you really well because I was trying to beat around the bush a little bit because I hadn't seen you—
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: So was I.
DR. PATRICIA LEE: [laughs]
DR. BRIAN LENZKES: We were feeling each other out, I'm like, OK, so why are you calling, what do you want, are you going to send me to jail? What's happening? Because you know it's a scary time, like for doctors it's like, almost like we're in the closet, like, I don't say— And, and the frustrating thing is, so many doctors were reaching out to me behind the scenes, but they weren't going to say nothing publicly. They'll say, Brian, say something about this, guess what I saw, guess what I saw, but they won't saying anything because they're protecting their own butts.
But you said, oh, by the way, I'm going public with this. And I said, are you crazy? Are you kidding me? Do you know the climate we're in? You go public and that's career suicide. They're going to dig, you know, there's, there's a lot of vested interests, they're going to dig through the trash to find anything you did in back in third grade, you put gum under the table or something, right? They're going to find anything on you they can to discredit you as a physician. I'm like, are you sure? Right? And your answer to me was— And I said why? And you said, look, based on what I'm seeing, I can't sleep at night if my kids are going to get vaccinated against their will, you know, against what I'm seeing and what I know is best for them. Even when I asked you, are you vaccinated? Yes, twice. Huh. I'm like, OK, You're not an anti-vaxx nutcase who's just saying, I don't like this thing, and you understand the implications because you're taking away people's hope because they're saying, this is your only way out. Like, we were told, that's your only way out.
So, at the same time, I was watching the data in Israel and other countries. I'm like, they're not getting better, as a matter of fact, they're getting worse, based on what we're seeing. So there's something wrong.
The latest from Dr. John Campbell:
Stroke and worse after Moderna
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLD3JIWqr6w
Also from his site:
Fatal Post COVID mRNA-Vaccine Associated Cerebral Ischemia
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37064...
Is he a noteworthy Dr. concerning covid or the jab?
GNL says
Is he a noteworthy Dr. concerning covid or the jab?
Do some research GNL. I'm sure you'll be satisfied with what you come up with.
CNN’s Republican political commentator Alice Stewart has tragically died suddenly at just 58 years old, the network has announced.
Stewart was a veteran political adviser and commentator known for her work on several GOP presidential campaigns.
According to CNN, Stewart was found dead outdoors early Saturday morning in Virginia.
Authorities stated that her death was caused by a “medical emergency” but provided no further details.
A new study has linked Covid mRNA shots to a rare autoimmune disease that started to surge in 2021.
Scientists analyzed soaring cases that emerged in Yorkshire, England.
According to the peer-reviewed study, published in the renowned Lancet journal, a rare autoimmune disease surged in Yorkshire after the rollout of the Covid injections.
The number of cases peaked in 2021 and continued to surge through 2022.
Anti-MDA5 dermatomyositis is an inflammatory condition characterized by muscle weakness, skin rashes, and rapidly progressive lung disease.
The autoimmune disease is very rare.
In 2019, two people in Yorkshire, with a population of 3.6 million, tested positive for the disease.
In 2020, the number of positive cases increased to nine.
The highest number of new cases, 35, was reported in 2021, followed by a decrease to 16 new cases in 2022.
The recent increase in autoimmune cases may be linked to interactions between the COVID-19 virus and vaccine RNA, according to Dr. Dennis McGonagle.
McGonagle is a clinical professor of medicine at the University of Leeds.
A leading analyst has raised the alarm over concerns that an “onrushing death wave” will soon wipe out “billions” of Covid-vaccinated people around the world.
The warning was issued by Dr. Richard Sauder.
Sauder is an American researcher with multiple degrees and the author of several books.
After analyzing multiple studies and expert opinions, Sauder issued a warning that a “wave” is coming our way that will result in mass death among the Covid vaccinated.
This will be followed by mass destruction, Dr. Sauder predicts.
In his report, Sauder states:
“Governments, public health ministries, and Big Pharma are not talking about what is coming – because they are deeply complicit in despicable, genocidal crimes – but there are a number of prominent, world-class, medical scientists explaining what is in the cards over the next few years: a tsunami of death, due to the billions of so-called Covid-19 vaccines that were injected into hordes of victims in countries all over the world.”
Young Newlywed Dies Suddenly in Husband’s Arms on Honeymoon, Doctors Stunned
Madison Noronha, from New South Wales (NSW) in Australia, passed away in her husband’s arms in the Netherlands.
Noronha collapsed unexpectedly while the newlywed couple was walking through Amsterdam on Wednesday.
She was rushed to a nearby hospital where she underwent emergency brain surgery but doctors said “nothing could be done to save her.”
During the surgery, doctors reportedly said they were stunned by what they saw.
“The doctors could not believe the size of the aneurysm and nothing could prevent this from happening and nothing could be done to save her,” her husband Kyle Noronha wrote online.
Aside from cancers, the Covid mRNA shots have also been linked to skyrocketing sudden deaths and a range of deadly side effects such as blood clots, heart failure, and strokes.
A growing assembly of oncologists and cancer experts is raising serious concerns over the global surge in rapidly developing aggressive cancer cases, often referred to as “turbo cancers.”
Several different forms of cancer have now been found to be quickly spreading among young, healthy people.
Some doctors are reporting that they are diagnosing apparently healthy people with cancer and they are dying within a week.
The unprecedented spread of the disease has led to oncology experts dubbing the phenomenon “turbo cancer.”
The latest expert to join the assembly of oncologists is Dr. Maarten Fornerod.
Fornerod is the associate professor of Cell Biology and Pediatric Oncology at the Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, Netherlands.
Conclusions
Statistically significant increases in age-adjusted mortality rates of all cancer and some specific types of cancer, namely, ovarian cancer, leukemia, prostate, lip/oral/pharyngeal, pancreatic, and breast cancers, were observed in 2022 after two-thirds of the Japanese population had received the third or later dose of SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-LNP vaccine. These particularly marked increases in mortality rates of these ERα-sensitive cancers may be attributable to several mechanisms of the mRNA-LNP vaccination rather than COVID-19 infection itself or reduced cancer care due to the lockdown.
Widow Bronwyn McAllister Tells Michael Gray Griffith About Her Husband's Turbo Cancer
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: OK. Yeah. So in October he had a pain in his belly, went to the doctor, doctor—
SMALL DAUGHTER: Mom [inaudible] we can go to choochoo train.
BRONWYN MCALLISTER [to daughter]: OK, we'll go on the train in a minute. [To Michael Gray Griffith] For appendicitis removal. They said, you don't have appendicitis. They couldn't work out what was wrong. He had every test. They couldn't diagnose at that time. On the 9th of November he had the AstraZeneca jab and on the 3rd of December he woke up not being able to breathe. They immediately diagnosed him with blood clots on his lungs. And then they, then they attempted to investigate and find out what was wrong. They then took another scan of his bowel and [inaudible] they took a scan of his bowel and he was absolutely full of disease at this point. So they compared October to 3rd of December, full of disease, it metastasized, it was, and within 2 weeks we were at [inaudible] and it was incurable. They couldn't do a damned thing. They tried chemo but they said—
MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: You say disease, what do you mean disease?
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: So the, like, tumor was, was huge, which he didn't have in October and it had metastasized to his belly, so—
MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: So the tumor that he didn't have in October—
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Yep.
MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: -how did it spread?
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: From October. I'm not even saying the colonoscopy, I'm saying, because that's usually how you diagnose, there's a scan with nothing and a scan full of, full of, you know, incurable. And yeah, he, within 10 weeks of having that, I'm not going to call it a vaccination, that poison, poison shot, he was dead. So, died 14th of February. And I've got 3 small children and I'm raising them on my own now. And I knew, I knew that this was a mass genocide and I would not partake in it, but we were building a house and he just wanted to look after his family and keep his job. So—
MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: What was his job?
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Ah, feeder machinist. Yeah. That's pretty much, that's what's happened. His parents come over from New South Wales, it was very difficult for them to get, to get, yeah, even with his grim diagnosis on, he was given all different, you know, three weeks, three years, like, they really didn't know. And, and when they saw the cancer in the fat cells, they were like, we haven't seen this before. And then she kind of, like, did this [makes a funny expression] and was like, she probably shouldn't of said that, you know? But yeah. I was, I was just, I knew, knew straight away that he had something happening, but you know, cancer usually, you know, you get a few years, or can do things, bowel cancer's one of the easiest treatable cancers, so—
MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: How did he, how did he handle his death? Like, you know, did he, did he come at peace at the end, or was he angry, or?
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: It was really interesting. He, it wasn't a religious, like, he was an atheist, full on atheist. I believe in God, that source is, you know, I'm really spiritual, he one day just said to me, I need to give my heart to God, and it blew my mind because he, yeah. But he, he knew, he knew it, it was going to take him. He was very weak. And because he couldn't eat food, there is, there's vitamin B17 could have treated it, cured it, but the TGA[1] won't allow it into the country, the injectable form, so, and the powder, yeah, it came too late, he had passed away by the time it come in the mail. So. Yeah. He, he, he was at peace sort of, but you know, he was angry, really angry.
SMALL DAUGHTER: Mom. Mom. [inaudible]
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: And he did one round of palliative chemo which he regrets as well. I mean, everything that, that they try— I mean, yeah, I just knew that anything, you know, western medicine was going to kill him. And they have. So.
MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: How are you coping?
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: I'm doing OK. I'm doing OK. I'm, you know, I'm crying every day. The kids are keeping me strong, I guess.
SMALL DAUGHTER: Mom.
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Yes. [To Michael Gray Griffith:] But you know, this is my middle one. I've got a baby and a 10 year old as well. So.
MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: A baby?
BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Yes. Yeah, he, his goals were, seeing her walk, seeing Lilly go to kindergarten. And seeing my 10 year old [holding daughter on lap; laughs] turn 10. So yeah. He got to see those things. But he, it just, it just destroyed him, this thing. Just destroyed him. The smell, like, that morning on the 3rd of December went into his room, the smell, it was just like chemicals, like you were in a chemical factory. Like, it wasn't like body odor, it was just like, like, I don't know, like the smell of someone who'd been poisoned. That's all, all I can describe. It's coming out of his pores, whatever it was, the spike protein or whatever. And yeah, definitely cause of blood clots. He had the elevated d-dimers,[2] they, we know that, so we've got all the paperwork there for that. Yeah.
Fatal Post COVID mRNA-Vaccine Associated Cerebral Ischemia
Venous thromboses have been linked to several COVID-19 vaccines, but there is limited information on the Moderna vaccine’s effect on the risk of arterial thrombosis. Here we describe a case of post-Moderna COVID-19 vaccination arterial infarct with vaccine-associated diffuse cortical edema that was complicated by refractory intracranial hypertension.
24 hrs after receiving her first dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine, a 30-year-old female developed severe headache. Three weeks later she was admitted with subacute headache and confusion. Imaging initially showed scattered cortical thrombosis with an elevated opening pressure on lumbar puncture. An external ventricular drain was placed, but she continued to have elevated intracranial pressure. Ultimately, she required a hemicraniectomy, but intractable cerebral edema resulted in her death. Pathology was consistent with thrombosis and associated inflammatory response.
….there is enough, in my opinion, there's enough strong evidence linking mRNA vaccines to cancer. and then in addition to the safety signal of Japan to say, okay, it's time to stop!
The death of a young New Zealand plumber from a side effect of a Covid-19 vaccine should have been prevented by telling him of the risks before getting the jab, a coroner has found.
Rory Nairn, 26, died from an inflamed heart - myocarditis - 12 days after receiving his first dose of the Comirnaty (Pfizer) vaccine at a New Zealand pharmacy in 2021.
Despite widespread availability of safe and effective vaccines (never mind that little AstraZeneca-clotting speed bump), the numbers of flu, rsv, and covid are rising in the world’s Kangaroo capital. And flu season is getting fatter. According to the Mail, and I am not making this up, not getting the flu is what is making everyone get the flu...
I won’t mention the possibility of immune suppression, since that’s just a conspiracy theory.
How long have we been hearing about a mass die off? I admit it would solve a lot of world problems but…
There’s a paper published by Nair et al. that showed in 2020 the actual miscarriage rate is closer to 5 to 6 percent. I’ve probably never even been that high. In 2020, from month to month, the average miscarriage rate in my practice was 4 percent. Then in 2021 when it spiked in November, the average rate was 7 to 8 percent, so it had doubled.
Then in 2022, from month to month, it went up to 15 percent, and that was up till November. In December of 2022, my miscarriage rate was 27 percent. In January and February of 2023, it was 30 percent. It didn’t normalize back down to 4 percent until June of 2023.
ERIN BORLAND: I received the first two doses of Moderna in January and February of 2021. I am a bedside nurse by practice, have been at the bedside for 13 years.
I started having facial reactions to the hospital-provided face masks that was consistent of contact dermatitis, facial swelling, and eczema on my eyelids. I have worn face masks throughout my career for different procedures, whether in the ICU or other procedures that were going on without a problem.
This started in October 2021, 10 months, roughly, after the first two doses of Moderna that I had received. I had not had covid any time during this span as well. I was prescribed two rounds of steroids and followed up with an allergist. The allergist was unable to find the cause of my contact dermatitis, labeling it as etiology unknown.
I followed up with the Occupational Health Department through work who then gave me hypoallergenic face masks, and I was still having the same reactions.
Now as a nurse I'm working 12 hour shifts and my face is on fire by the end of this shift. Also of note, it was taking days for my face to actually calm down after working a 12 hour shift. ...
And, of note, I worked with nurses, everyone had to have the covid vaccine and the booster, and after receiving the boosters the majority of people were out on leave with covid. So it was noticeable that even with the vaccines and booster, people were still contagious and still contracting the virus. We were told that being mandated to receive the booster was for patient safety. So if was unclear to me why I was being mandated to receive a booster if it was still contagious and still transmittable in front of taking care of patients.
MEREDITH: Hi everyone. My name is Meredith or Merry, as I go by, as in Christmas. I'm a 77 year old Duxbury resident, retired registered nurse, and vaccine injured. I've spent a lot of time in public health, in pediatrics and OB.
It has been 2 years, one month, 20 days since I received my second Moderna covid vaccine. I had a mild reaction to the first, so, which disappeared in three days, so I figured, OK, I'll go for my second, being coerced by husband and family.
However, my second resulted in a severe reaction within 12 hours. I awoke at midnight, had my shot at noon, with a severe horrifying burning throughout my whole body from my scalp to my toes. It was a total out of body experience, and that's the way I described it to my husband. I felt I wanted to send him downstairs and I said, go get me a knife, my legs need to be cut open so it'll, otherwise they're going to explode.
The severity lasted 5 days. I could not walk, could not stay awake, I had severe right-sided face, jaw tingling and burning, headaches, blurred vision, brain fog, body aches, nausea, and hot flashes. All of these continue to this day. Not as often, not as intense.
My previous health was excellent. I take no prescriptions. I played pickle ball, golf, cared for grandkids, cared for an elderly mother, and also walked 2 to 3 miles 3 to 6 times a week. Other than arthritis, what can I say for my age?
Many of the symptoms, poisoning, remain 2 years later with the same as I said before, although we've added occasional heart palpitations, more hot flashes, micro clots in my hands which go cold and hot. I can, they, um, and they move all over my body. One day it'll be nausea, three days later it'll be my legs, four days later it'll be a headache and of course fatigue.
The doctors are clueless and basically useless you can find somebody who listens. Nothing shows up in testing. You have to do research yourself and try to find somebody. I've read and read and read.
My husband also ended up with a blood clot after his third. His hematologist at Dana-Farber finally moved over to us after many tests and said, quietly, yes, it's the vaccine, when we asked.
My son passed out at Gillette Stadium with no known reason. Hit the floor, cement steps, on his way to the men's room. He was unconscious and taken to the hospital. Broke his jaw, broke his nose, stitches everywhere.
I have a list of my own, three columns long. [holds up a handwritten document] I am one person who knows all these people who have been affected by their vaccine.
I questioned from the beginning the vaccine safety and the public health misinformation. I am not opposed to vaccines. My biggest regret is taking them.
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https://bigleaguepolitics.com/better-call-saul-star-bob-odenkirk-collapses-on-set-after-receiving-experimental-covid-19-vaccine/