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Did you know that the flu vaccine doesn’t reduce deaths from pneumonia and flu?


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2022 Feb 4, 9:55am   572 views  7 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

The National Vaccine Program Office, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), funded a study to examine flu mortality over the period of 33 years (1968–2001). The study found no decrease in flu mortality associated with the widespread use of the influenza vaccine. The authors state: “We could not correlate increasing vaccination coverage after 1980 with declining mortality rates in any age group… [W]e conclude that observational studies substantially overestimate vaccination benefit.”

Furthermore, the National Institute of Health (NIH) funded a study to measure the effect of seasonal influenza vaccination on mortality among the elderly. The study analyzed 7.6 million deaths and found “a sharp increase in influenza vaccination rates at age 65 years with no matching decrease in hospitalization or mortality rates.”

1. THERE IS A 65% INCREASED RISK OF NON-FLU RESPIRATORY ILLNESS IN POPULATIONS THAT GET THE FLU VACCINE.

Although some studies suggest positive effects of the flu vaccine on the incidence of illness caused by flu viruses, that benefit is potentially outweighed by the negative effects of the flu vaccine on the incidence of non-flu respiratory illness.1 To address the concern among patients that the flu vaccine causes illness (i.e., acute respiratory illness), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funded a three-year study,2 published in Vaccine, to analyze the risk of illness after flu vaccination compared to the risk of illness in unvaccinated individuals.

The study, which included healthy subjects, found a 65% increased risk of non-flu acute respiratory illness within 14 days of receiving the flu vaccine. The authors state, “Patients’ experiences of illness after vaccination may be validated by these results.” The most common non-flu pathogens found were rhinovirus, enterovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, and coronaviruses.

This is important because although flu vaccines target three or four strains of flu virus,3 over 200 different viruses cause illnesses that produce the same symptoms—fever, headache, aches, pains, cough, and runny nose—as influenza,4 and more than 85% of acute respiratory illnesses do not involve the flu.5


2. STUDIES SHOW THE FLU VACCINE DOESN’T REDUCE DEMAND ON HOSPITALS.

The National Institute of Health (NIH) funded a study6 to measure the effect of seasonal influenza vaccination on hospitalization among the elderly. The study analyzed 170 million episodes of medical care and found that “no evidence indicated that vaccination reduced hospitalizations.”

In addition, a 2018 Cochrane review7 of 52 clinical trials assessing the effectiveness of influenza vaccines did not find a significant difference in hospitalizations between vaccinated and unvaccinated adults. Instead, the reviewers found “low-certainty evidence that hospitalization rates and time off work may be comparable between vaccinated and unvaccinated adults.”

Furthermore, the Mayo Clinic conducted a case-control study8 to analyze the effectiveness of the trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV) in preventing flu hospitalization in children 6 months to 18 years old. The study evaluated the risk of hospitalization in both vaccinated and unvaccinated children over an eight-year period. The authors state: “TIV is not effective in preventing laboratory-confirmed influenza-related hospitalization in children.” Instead, “[W]e found a threefold increased risk of hospitalization in subjects who did get the TIV vaccine.”


3. STUDIES SHOW THE FLU VACCINE DOESN’T PREVENT THE SPREAD OF THE FLU.

Households are thought to play a major role in community spread of influenza, and there has been a long history of analyzing family households to study the incidence and transmission of respiratory illnesses of all severities. As such, the CDC funded a study9 of 1,441 participants, both vaccinated and unvaccinated, in 328 households. The study evaluated the flu vaccine’s ability to prevent community-acquired influenza (household index cases) and influenza acquired in people with confirmed household exposure to the flu (secondary cases). Transmission risks were determined and characterized.

In conclusion, the authors state: “There was no evidence that vaccination prevented household transmission once influenza was introduced.”9,10

Furthermore, a systematic review5 of 50 influenza vaccine studies conducted for the Cochrane Library states: “Influenza vaccines have a modest effect in reducing influenza symptoms and working days lost. There is no evidence that they affect complications, such as pneumonia, or transmission.”


4. THE FLU VACCINE FAILS TO PREVENT THE FLU ABOUT 65% OF THE TIME.

The CDC conducts studies to assess the effects of flu vaccination each flu season to help determine if flu vaccines are working as intended.11 As circulating flu viruses are constantly changing (primarily due to antigenic drift mutations),12 flu vaccines are reformulated regularly based on a “best guess” of which viruses might circulate during the coming flu season.3 The CDC states: “CDC monitors vaccine effectiveness annually through the Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness (VE) Network, a collaboration with participating institutions in five geographic locations… [A]nnual estimates of vaccine effectiveness give a real-world look at how well the vaccine protects against influenza caused by circulating viruses each season.”13

Data from the CDC’s Influenza VE Network indicate a 65% vaccine failure rate between 2014 and 2018 (Fig. 1).11


5. REPEAT DOSES OF THE FLU VACCINE MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF FLU VACCINE FAILURE.

Studies have observed that influenza vaccines have low effectiveness in individuals who are vaccinated in two consecutive years.9 A review of 17 influenza vaccine studies published in Expert Review of Vaccines states, “The effects of repeated annual vaccination on individual long-term protection, population immunity, and virus evolution remain largely unknown.”14


6. DEATH FROM INFLUENZA IS RARE IN CHILDREN.

Before the widespread use of the influenza vaccine in children, between 2000 and 2003, each year kids age 18 and younger had about 1 in 1.26 million or 0.00008% chance of dying from the flu.15 In a 2004 report, the CDC stated, “Deaths from influenza are uncommon among children with and without high-risk conditions.”16


7. STUDIES SHOW THE FLU VACCINE DOESN’T REDUCE DEATHS FROM PNEUMONIA AND FLU.

The National Vaccine Program Office, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), funded a study17 to examine flu mortality over the period of 33 years (1968–2001). The study found no decrease in flu mortality associated with the widespread use of the influenza vaccine. The authors state: “We could not correlate increasing vaccination coverage after 1980 with declining mortality rates in any age group… [W]e conclude that observational studies substantially overestimate vaccination benefit.”

Furthermore, the National Institute of Health (NIH) funded a study6 to measure the effect of seasonal influenza vaccination on mortality among the elderly. The study analyzed 7.6 million deaths and found “a sharp increase in influenza vaccination rates at age 65 years with no matching decrease in hospitalization or mortality rates.”


8. STUDIES SHOW PATIENTS DON’T BENEFIT FROM THE VACCINATION OF HEALTHCARE WORKERS.

A review18 of more than 30 influenza vaccine studies conducted for the Cochrane Library states, “Our review findings have not identified conclusive evidence of benefit of HCW [healthcare workers] vaccination programs on specific outcomes of laboratory-proven influenza, its complications (lower respiratory tract infection, hospitalization or death due to lower respiratory tract illness), or all cause mortality in people over the age of 60.” The authors conclude, “This review does not provide reasonable evidence to support the vaccination of healthcare workers to prevent influenza.” In addition, “There is little evidence to justify medical care and public health practitioners mandating influenza vaccination for healthcare workers.”


9. FLU VACCINE MANDATES ARE NOT SCIENCE-BASED.

A Cochrane Vaccines Field analysis19 evaluated studies measuring the benefits of flu vaccination. The analysis, published in the BMJ, concludes: “The large gap between policy and what the data tell us (when rigorously assembled and evaluated) is surprising… Evidence from systematic reviews shows that inactivated vaccines have little or no effect on the effects measured… Reasons for the current gap between policy and evidence are unclear, but given the huge resources involved, a re-evaluation should be urgently undertaken.”

https://physiciansforinformedconsent.org/influenza-flu-vaccine/?source=patrick.net


Comments 1 - 7 of 7        Search these comments

1   GNL   2022 Feb 4, 10:58am  

Why are we talking about the Flu Vaccine? Aren't we more concerned with the Covid 19 non-vax?
2   Ceffer   2022 Feb 4, 11:21am  

Flu vaccines function to get the population used to being jabbed like veterinary livestock. It's so much easier to administer the death jabs when they have already been trained.
3   Patrick   2022 Feb 4, 2:20pm  

Studies show that flu vaccines are very effective at boosting profits for Pfizer.
5   komputodo   2022 Mar 14, 9:44pm  

WineHorror1 says
Why are we talking about the Flu Vaccine? Aren't we more concerned with the Covid 19 non-vax?

Wait...aren;t we supposed to be focusing on Ukraine?
6   stfu   2022 Mar 15, 3:24am  

Is it possible that the flu shots are the thing that keeps influenza going? Have we been witnessing ADE since the 80's?
7   WookieMan   2023 Apr 16, 6:42am  

GNL says

Why are we talking about the Flu Vaccine? Aren't we more concerned with the Covid 19 non-vax?

Old post, but didn't want to start a new thread. For sure have the flu now, but it's nothing like I've ever had. Two negative covid tests so far, but the tests are from November and I don't know how testing works with new evolving strains for covid.

The symptoms are weird. I can barely walk and move. No cough or sinus issues. The pain and soreness is borderline unbearable. Moderate fever. Freezing yet I'm sweating through shirts which I don't normally do unless it's above 90º on a high humidity day here. I can't even look at food without thinking of puking. I've just never had this level of pain throughout the whole body in any flu.

I'm concerned we're going to have 2 or even 3 flu seasons now. I'm also concerned having covid in November '22 that pure blood or vaxxed it's weakening our immune systems once we've gotten covid. Basically is a long game virus (covid) that destroys your immune system over time and you're more prone to get other strains of flu and it's harder to fight off. I can't trust China or our government. I think of it as a virus that causes lupus or some other auto immune disease that's undetectable until you figure it out.

Just a theory but this categorically sucks ass right now. I've never been sick twice like this over 4 months time roughly. My last flu if I recall was 2017. I'm not overweight. No fast food or sodas. Avoid fried food. Generally active. Don't interact with people in an office setting. Obviously hang out with friends, but I'm generally not around large groups and wife and kids are fine. This one is just bizarre. I need to get stuff done but physically can't. Played sports my whole life and have never felt total body pain like this.

I think I hit peak. I knew something was off Thursday. Sat on my bed and literally passed out for 6 hours. Didn't feel sick but was abnormal because it was 6pm when I did this.

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