CDC walks back COVID guidance again, finds lasting post-vaccine heart problems in young adultsIvy League-affiliated hospital hides myocarditis ad for kids following criticism that it's trying to "normalize" vaccine-induced condition. Cardiologist explains how father's inexplicable death led him to question COVID vaccines.Greg Piper | September 26, 2022 - 11:19pmThe CDC continues to
erase distinctions by COVID-19 vaccination status in public health guidance as ongoing global research — including its own — documents the mediocre performance of COVID vaccines and their unexpectedly high rates of lasting harm in some groups.
Vaccination status is no longer used "to inform source control, screening testing, or post-exposure recommendations" for healthcare personnel, the
Friday update to their CDC guidance says.
The agency "[c]larified" that healthcare facilities, including nursing homes, have discretion on whether to screen-test asymptomatic personnel. It also now says asymptomatic patients "in general" do not require "empiric use of Transmission-Based Precautions" after exposure to an infected person.
A CDC study of 12-29 year-olds with heart inflammation following mRNA vaccination, published last week in
The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, found that 1 in 6 still had not "fully recovered" at least 90 days after myocarditis onset, including 1 in 100 who hadn't improved at all.
Myocarditis has increased so markedly among youth since vaccines were authorized for them that an Ivy League-affiliated hospital started running TV ads this month for its treatment in children. New York-Presbyterian marked the ad's
Sept. 6 YouTube video private less than two weeks later, following criticism that it was
trying to "normalize" a vaccine-induced condition.
The CDC's COVID-19 Response Team found more than 800 myocarditis reports to the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System from Jan. 12 to Nov. 5, 2021 that matched the parameters for age and time since onset. . .
https://justthenews.com/government/federal-agencies/cdc-walks-back-covid-guidance-again-finds-lasting-post-vaccine-heart