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The damage caused to the heart muscle in rare occurrences of myocarditis after coronavirus vaccination is mild and unlikely to affect patients’ long-term health, according to a new study published by Rabin Medical Center doctors and scientists.
According to Hamdan, myocarditis appears to be an immediate auto-immune reaction and nothing more. He said given the mild damage and the fact that despite some inflammation the heart appeared to be functioning normally, “we expect these patients will have no problem in the future.”
It's now almost mid November and he can basically do nothing. Even going out for walks with his walking device, a contraption with wheels and a handbrake has become a struggle, he worsened up.
The MsM unashamedly strait up lie.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: HawkEyi
Think the chance of developing heart inflammation(Myocarditis) down to COVID 19 is far greater than with the vaccine.
www.newscientist.com...
www.webmd.com...
Mortality rate for child myocarditis is around 5 to 8 percent
originally posted by: myselfaswell
a reply to: HawkEyi
I have a question;
At what point did using 15 people constitute a "study" that could be reliably extrapolated across a population of 7,905,000,000.
That's;
15 in the study
and
7,905,000,000 who are apparently all the same as the 15 in the study, ffs.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: HawkEyi
Think the chance of developing heart inflammation(Myocarditis) down to COVID 19 is far greater than with the vaccine.
www.newscientist.com...
www.webmd.com...
Based in Israel, the study showed that Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine is linked to an increased risk of myocarditis, with about one to five cases per 100,000 people. But COVID-19 infection was linked to an increased risk of 11 cases per 100,000 people.