In calling for a halt in the use of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, Florida State Surgeon General Dr. Joseph A. Ladapo joins a growing number of healthcare professionals expressing concern over the safety of these products. Citing the recent discovery of DNA fragments in the Pfizer and Moderna injections, Ladapo describes how the potential risks of their integration into human cells include chromosomal instability and the possibility that integrated DNA may be passed down to offspring.
The discovery of these DNA fragments follows the publication of an independent review article in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences which calls for COVID-19 mRNA vaccines to be reclassified as gene therapy products. Noting the rapid development and approval of the injections in response to COVID-19, the article argues that, now the pandemic has passed, it is time to properly consider the safety issues associated with their use. Despite their principle of action clearly corresponding to regulatory definitions of gene therapies, the article explains, the injections are instead wrongly being treated as vaccines against infectious diseases.
To read how COVID-19 mRNA vaccines have been promoted using misleading risk reduction statistics, see this article on our website.
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January 25, 2024Florida State Surgeon General Calls for Halt in the Use of COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines
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On December 6, 2023, State Surgeon General Dr. Joseph A. Ladapo sent a letter to the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Dr. Robert M. Califf and Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Dr. Mandy Cohen regarding questions pertaining to the safety assessments and the discovery of billions of DNA fragments per dose of the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.
[Source: floridahealth.gov]
[Image source: Adobe Stock]
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In calling for a halt in the use of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, Florida State Surgeon General Dr. Joseph A. Ladapo joins a growing number of healthcare professionals expressing concern over the safety of these products. Citing the recent discovery of DNA fragments in the Pfizer and Moderna injections, Ladapo describes how the potential risks of their integration into human cells include chromosomal instability and the possibility that integrated DNA may be passed down to offspring.
The discovery of these DNA fragments follows the publication of an independent review article in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences which calls for COVID-19 mRNA vaccines to be reclassified as gene therapy products. Noting the rapid development and approval of the injections in response to COVID-19, the article argues that, now the pandemic has passed, it is time to properly consider the safety issues associated with their use. Despite their principle of action clearly corresponding to regulatory definitions of gene therapies, the article explains, the injections are instead wrongly being treated as vaccines against infectious diseases.
To read how COVID-19 mRNA vaccines have been promoted using misleading risk reduction statistics, see this article on our website.
Dr. Rath Health Foundation
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