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Can the COVID Vaccine Affect Fertility?

BY JOSEPH MERCOLA

 

Researchers have noted that a link between the jabs and menstrual changes are plausible. Here’s what the findings say.

STORY AT-A-GLANCE

  • Two U.S. researchers have more than 140,000 reports from people who’ve had changes in their period following COVID-19 injections
  • Another 30,000 reports of period changes following the jabs have been reported in the U.K.
  • In an editorial published in the BMJ, a lecturer in reproductive immunology stated that when it comes to menstrual changes after COVID-19 shots, a biological link is plausible and should be investigated
  • Pfizer’s biodistribution study, which was used to determine where the injected substances go in the body, showed the COVID-19 spike protein from the shots accumulated in “quite high concentrations” in the ovaries
  • A prominent toxicologist and molecular biologist is calling for “all gene therapy vaccines” to “be halted immediately due to safety concerns,” including the potential for impaired fertility

Women across the U.S. have reported changes in their menstrual cycles following COVID-19 shots. Changes include heavier, earlier and more painful periods,[1] as well as unexpected breakthrough bleeding or spotting among women on long-acting contraception or those who are postmenopausal and hadn’t had a period in years or even decades.[2] Health officials have tried to brush off the reports, but they’ve become too numerous to ignore.

Kate Clancy, a human reproductive ecologist and associate professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and Katharine Lee, a biological anthropologist studying women’s health at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, have more than 140,000 reports from those who’ve had changes in their period following COVID-19 injections, which they’re formally documenting in an open-ended study.[3]

Another 30,000 reports of period changes following the jabs have been reported to the U.K.’s regulator.[4] The implication is that the shots could be having an effect on fertility, but in order to keep people lining up for shots, no questions asked, officials have been quick to deny such a link.

 

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