It is the Fourth of July and the following article extolls the vitures of why our babies should be injected without fear of harm for their well being. The Daily Herald which is a Chicago Suburban newspaper has published this article supposedly written by a physician that implies that she wrote the article. If you examine the format and devlopment of the article, it is clearly written by a word smith employed by a PR firm employed by Pfizer or Moderna. You will probably find the same article in local newspapers around the country with a name of another female physician with children. This last year Pfizer hired 27 PR firms to push their mRNA injection narrative including the push to use their Paxlovid for treating the virus. It has been standard operating procedure to find physicians that agree with the drug company and their medical push and have them agree to have their name added to the PR piece because it lends credibility on a local basis to the information being presented to get the mother to agree to inject their baby for their supposed safety. No one explains to the mother why a man made virus that reprograms cellular function can only be stopped by a man made nano drug injection that reprograms cellular function. It can’t, and only disrupts the normal cellular function and reprograms and changes the functionailty of the cell that is invaded by these man made pathogens. The negative effects of these injections are only now starting to be exposed and the long term effects are unknown. Read the PR article and let me know if you agree that it discounts any negative effects of the injection.
On Friday, June 17, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized the emergency use of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children under the age of 5, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supporting the decision the following day.
This decision means children 6 months to 5 years can receive the Pfizer vaccine, and those 6 months to 6 years can receive the Moderna shots. This decision was made after clinical trials for both vaccines found them to be effective with no reported safety concerns and mild to moderate side effects, as seen in older children and adults.
Many families have been waiting for this decision and are hoping to start the vaccinations as soon as possible to make the most of the summer months together. But some may yet be hesitant.
I know how they feel. As the mother of two young ones, one under 5 years, I'm in the same boat. But before heading off on our summer vacation, I made sure my youngest received her first vaccine dose.
Below are some of the most common questions we're receiving from parents about this latest vaccine approval.
• Is the COVID-19 vaccine safe for younger kids?
As with older children and the adults before them, both vaccinations for children under 5 years of age underwent rigorous clinical trials to ensure safety. Moreover, the vaccines are being monitored for safety with the most comprehensive and intense safety monitoring program in U.S. history. Both the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines have been shown to be safe and effective.
• Are there side effects to the vaccines for younger children?
There are possible side effects, just as with adults, but the benefits outweigh the risks. Reported side effects were soreness at the injection site, chills, fever and headache. Fever is often the most concerning for parents of little ones; however, it is a normal reaction and shows the vaccine is working with the child's immune system. And with over-the-counter medications, fever can be managed fairly easily.
• Should my child get the COVID-19 vaccine? What if they've already had COVID-19?
I recommend getting your child vaccinated as soon as possible, even if they've previously had COVID-19. This significantly lowers the risk of infection or reinfection and helps protect them against possible future virus variants.
And remember, vaccination protects more than your child. It protects other people's children and other family members. Vaccination remains the single best way to end the spread of the virus.
• Will the COVID-19 vaccine cause future infertility?
According to studies, the COVID-19 vaccines will not affect your child's future fertility. During the Pfizer vaccine tests, 23 women volunteers involved in the study became pregnant. If you still have questions or concerns, talk about it with your child's primary care provider.
• Should any younger children not get the COVID-19 vaccine?
If your child has a history of a severe allergic reaction to any of the vaccine's ingredients, speak with their pediatrician first. But such allergies are very rare, given the makeup of these mRNA vaccines. • How is the children's COVID-19 vaccine different from the one adults get?
The vaccine for children under 5 uses a lower dose than the adult version and is administered with a smaller needle. For instance, the Pfizer vaccine is given in doses of three micrograms in a three-dose series for little ones, while adults receive two doses of 30 micrograms each. The vaccine's ingredients, however, are the same.
• Can my child get COVID-19 from the COVID-19 vaccine?
The vaccine does not expose children to the virus. Instead, it uses messenger RNA (mRNA) to teach their immune systems to recognize and fight the actual virus. Think of mRNA as instructions for how to make something. In the case of the COVID-19 vaccines, those instructions are for cells to produce the spike protein that exist on the surface of the coronavirus. This spike protein is harmless by itself, but when is appears on the surface of cells, the immune system recognizes that it doesn't belong and makes antibodies to destroy it. Those antibodies are then used to fight the actual virus if the child is ever exposed to it.
There also is an inherent gamble in taking a wait-and-see approach to vaccination. If a more powerful or contagious variant were to break out, children could be at a higher risk of severe infection or persistent symptoms. (My view: A fear statement to convince mother to have their child injected))
There are approximately 17 million children in the U.S. under the age of 5, the last age group to be approved for vaccination. With each person who vaccinated, we all get one step closer to a world without COVID-19. A world without restrictions on playdates, playgrounds, sports or socializing -- a world our children need.
• Dr. Dana Vais is a mother of two and the medical director for infectious disease for Ascension Illinois.
There are many well educated physcians with impecable credentials that strongly disagree with this narrative and whose voices should be heard, including Dr. Robert Malone who did the basic research on how we can trick the immune system and reprogram cellular function via an injection. Read him at substack!
DEVASTATING! Injecting children with COVID vaxx (FDA, CDC) is going to be deadly!; there is no way you can control a pandemic without having herd immunity; means you must cut the chain of transmission (substack.com)
Thank you for Standing up and telling it like it is!
Good stuff! Subscribed