Similar Posts
England drowning in swine flu vaccine; Poland has none and explains why/ BBC
From Fergus Walsh, BBC Medical correspondent: By my reckoning (and this is an estimate only) around 5.25 million people have been vaccinated in Britain. That means there is an awful lot of vaccine – tens of millions of doses – going spare. I’m told an announcement is likely in around 10 days regarding what will…
Better Info on H1N1: Cidrap at U. Minnesota
Here is a compendium of very useful info on H1N1, both for clinicians and the public. It appears to be regularly updated. Cidrap has gathered its information from WHO, CDC and other sources.
Doctor’s Medical License Suspended Over Accusations of Spreading COVID Misinformation/ Newsweek
Interestingly, Newsweek put a video of Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, saying a small number of naysaying professionals are criminals, responsible for the deaths of millions, at the top of this article. They did not say Bourla’s vaccine is injuring and killing people, nor did they say Bourla himself admits it no longer works. Nor did…
Unused German swine flu vaccine goes up in smoke (about 250 million Euros worth)/ The Local
… But the [2009 swine] flu was much milder than expected, and this, combined with safety fears over the new vaccine, led to only around seven percent of Germans opting to get the vaccine. Germany actually purchased two different types of swine flu vaccine: one with a novel adjuvant (that used less antigen and instead…
Swine flu vaccine is safe, they say: but I am seeing nasty coincidences
Real data is important, and anecdotes are just anecdotal. Yet during the past 3 weeks I have been personally involved with 3 events that have me concerned. I am a doctor on an island of 13,000 people, where hundreds received swine flu vaccine. Coincidence 1: several hours after getting the swine flu vaccine, a man…
Setting the Record Straight [when Glaxo Fakes the Data] / JAMA
Steve Nissen, head of Cardiology at the Cleveland Clinic, authored an editorial in JAMA last month on the means by which GlaxoSmithKline tried to cover up increased cardiac events in patients on its drug Avandia (Rosiglitazone). JAMA’s editor, Catherine DeAngelis, wrote her own editorial on this issue, noting: According to the article by Nissen,1 the…
3 Comments
Comments are closed.
And that's the truth.
Lies for money. Big lies for big money. I interested in the death of (artist formely known as) Prince. Some years ago he got an overdose from an opioid (7 times stronger than heroin), I concluded from all the news then. These opioids are a big problem in US, I understand. And still Big Pharma produces it. Is this their next 'medicine'?
Oops. The same opioid was in the news at the death of G.F. said the police in court. It is a little political sensitive at the moment. If I say it right.