- From "The impact of SARS-CoV-2 infection on vaccinated versus unvaccinated pregnant women: a retrospective cohort study"--BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth (April 30, 2025). The authors "evaluated the obstetric and neonatal symptoms and complications presented by these first pregnant women infected with SARS-CoV-2, vaccinated and unvaccinated." The main point that they make in their conclusions is that pregnant women that had been "vaccinated" against Covid-19 but were still diagnosed with Covid had less severe symptoms than unvaccinated pregnant women with Covid. But unmentioned in the synopsis, buried deep in the paper, was this:
When differentiating by trimester of COVID-19 diagnosis, 5 miscarriages (10.4%) were observed among vaccinated women diagnosed in the first or second trimester of pregnancy compared to 1 miscarriage (2.7%) among those diagnosed in the third trimester. This resulted in a higher risk of miscarriage in the group diagnosed in the first or second trimester among vaccinated women (R 18.5, 95% CI 2.38 to 144.2, p < 0.001). Similarly, among unvaccinated women, those diagnosed with COVID-19 in the third trimester showed a lower risk of miscarriage than those diagnosed in the first or second trimester (R 0.89, 95% CIn 0.081 to 0.99, p = 0.009). The remaining characteristics of childbirth and complications during pregnancy showed no significant differences when adjusted for trimester of COVID-19 diagnosis (data not shown).
- And then there is this paper from the journal Vaccines: "Impact of mRNA and Inactivated COVID-19 Vaccines on Ovarian Reserve" by Enes Karaman, et al. Their conclusion: "Our findings suggest that both mRNA and inactivated COVID-19 vaccines may detrimentally impact ovarian reserve in rats, primarily through accelerated follicular loss and alterations in apoptotic pathways during folliculogenesis. Given these observations in a rat model, further investigations into the vaccines’ effects on human ovarian reserve are needed."
- From the Daily Caller (via AOL): "RFK Jr. Reportedly Moves To Stop Recommending COVID-19 Vaccine For Pregnant Women, Children." Not surprising inasmuch, the article reports, RFK Jr. had stated last year: “The CDC recommends THREE Pfizer Covid shots for babies by age 9 months. These shots are unsafe and ineffective, especially over the long term. And babies are at near-zero risk from Covid. So whose benefit is the CDC serving here?”
But I was told it's safe and effective.
ReplyDeleteThe Google AI says it's safe and effective, so it must be true.
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