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2022 Reports of Myocarditis after COVID Shots Reach Almost Half of 2021 Total In Just 2 Months

Calvin Freiburger : Mar 18, 2022
LifeSiteNews.com

CDC researchers have admitted that 'under-reporting is more likely' of adverse events to VAERS than over-reporting.

(Washington, DC) — [LifeSiteNews.com] Preliminary data from the federal Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) database for just the first two months of 2022 suggests an alarming spike in heart problems possibly stemming from the COVID-19 vaccines. (Image: Pixabay)

On March 11, The Blaze senior editor Daniel Horowitz highlighted the fact that 11,289 cases of pericarditis/myocarditis  after COVID vaccination were reported to VAERS between January 1 and February 25 of this year, which is already 47% of the 24,177 reports for the same submitted in all of 2021.

The news is the latest apparent affirmation of the serious reservations many Americans have harbored as to the COVID vaccines' safety, stemming in large part from the rushed nature of their creation. The Trump administration's Operation Warp Speed initiative developed and released the shots in a tenth of the time vaccine development usually takes and a quarter of the time it took the previous record-holder, the mumps vaccine, yet their advocates have done little to address the concerns of the hesitant.

Defenders of the relatively-new shots claim that VAERS offers an exaggerated view of a vaccine's potential risks, as anyone can submit a report without vetting it. However, Horowitz noted that US Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) researchers have acknowledged "high verification rate of reports of myocarditis to VAERS after mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccination," leading to the conclusion that "under-reporting is more likely" than over-reporting.

Further, a 2010 report submitted to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services' (HHS's) Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) warned that VAERS caught "fewer than 1% of vaccine adverse events." On the problem of under-reporting, the VAERS website offers only that "more serious and unexpected medical events are probably more likely to be reported than minor ones" (emphasis added).

Last year, Project Veritas shed light on some of the reasons for such under-reporting with undercover video from inside Phoenix Indian Medical Center, a facility run under the auspices of the HHS's Indian Health Service program, in which multiplied medical professionals attest to seeing adverse reactions far more frequently than the impression given by the mainstream media... Subscribe for free to Breaking Christian News here

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