Side effects of the anti-Covid vaccine are caused by… the anti-vax movement, according to a scientific article

by time news

Side effects of the anti-Covid vaccination are caused by… the anti-vax movement. This is the assertion made by an article, published on PubMed. The author of the article claims that “the misinformation perpetuated by the anti-vaccination movement can cause more deaths and side effects” you vaccine anti-Covid.

This article, published last September, finds that “alarmism” and the “disinformation” peddled by “people without scientific training” pour “terrorize” individuals so that they do not get vaccinated, not only exposes them to contamination but “also cause more side effects”.

The summary states “of a review” which offers data supporting the claim advanced by this article: “A mini-review of the published literature was conducted and found that mental stress clearly causes vasoconstriction and arterial constriction of blood vessels”.

Anti-vaccination groups cause heart attacks in vaccinees

This text explains that subjects to vaccination who “are panicked, worried, stressed or scared” due to the anti-vax movement, will see “their arteries contract and become smaller at the time of receiving the vaccine”. This phenomenon, i.e. “the constriction of veins, arteries and vessels under mental stress”is “the most likely cause of blood clots, strokes, heart attacks, dizziness, fainting, blurred vision, loss of smell and taste which could have occurred shortly time after vaccine administration”can we read.

Where does this stress at the origin of this vasoconstriction, itself the cause of several other side effects, come from? Probably “scare tactics used by various anti-vaccination groups”. While the text does not deny the side effects caused by the Covid vaccine itself, it does state that it is “fort probable” than many other side effects “could be the result of restricted or congested blood flow from a blood vessel or arterial constriction, caused by emotional distress or vaccine fear-based placebo”.

The publication of this article did not fail to arouse derision on social networks. Politicians, researchers or simple Internet users have relayed the link to this text, not without repeating the main assertion that the anti-vax movement is the cause of several side effects of the anti-Covid vaccine.

“Such is the state of science in 2022”, taunts Israeli researcher Dr. Eli David by using a clown emoji to make his opinion known.

The literature has not yet been written

German politician Christine Anderson writes: “Is that how they play it now? (…) They stop at nothing to conceal their gigantic lie”.

Another Internet user explained that he had contacted Raymond D. Palmer, the author of this article. After sharing a link on his “passive” and retraced his journey on LinkedIn, he writes: “According to his LinkedIn, Palmer is an electrical engineer and an astronomy enthusiast. In 2019, he started taking courses in gene therapy, biochemistry, etc. That same year, he began to publish articles in medical journals”he wrote.

Internet user @dystopian_DU reports that Raymond Palmer defines himself as “a data-driven scientist”. “I asked for his ‘data-driven’ evidence for the claim that stress from vaccine ‘misinformation’ produces adverse event-like symptoms…’Silence’…The literature does not has not yet been written”he wrote.

Ridiculous statements about vaccination are not uncommon in the United States. At a briefing on November 22 at the White House, Dr. Ashish Jha, Covid manager to President Joe Biden, made a curious statement. He invited American citizens to receive booster doses of the vaccine against covid and against the flu, for “to protect yourself” in anticipation of the winter season and the end of year celebrations. He suggests, openly, to receive these two doses in each of the two arms. “God gave us two arms. Take a vaccine in each of them”he said.

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