(CNN)There's no biological basis behind ongoing social media claims that Covid-19 vaccines can harm the placenta, the organ that provides a growing baby oxygen and nutrients during pregnancy.
"There's no theoretical reason to believe these vaccines would be harmful," Dr. Richard Beigi, who sits on the Immunization, Infectious Disease, and Public Health Preparedness Expert Work Group of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, told CNN in a Q&A on the subject.
"There's never been any vaccine that's been linked with infertility," he said
When I was a kid my mom took me to see a man with no arms who could play guitar with his feet. He didn't have arms because the doctors told his mother that the medicine she took while pregnant was safe.
The CNN article links to a study of NBA players. Total BS:
The risk of death for pregnant women with Covid-19 was 1.6%, which was 22 times higher than pregnant women who were not infected, according to the study.
Here's the "according to the study link" with no matches for the word "pregnant" or "placenta" in the study they are citing.
(CNN)There's no biological basis behind ongoing social media claims that Covid-19 vaccines can harm the placenta, the organ that provides a growing baby oxygen and nutrients during pregnancy.
"There's no theoretical reason to believe these vaccines would be harmful," Dr. Richard Beigi, who sits on the Immunization, Infectious Disease, and Public Health Preparedness Expert Work Group of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, told CNN in a Q&A on the subject.
"There's never been any vaccine that's been linked with infertility," he said
This may fall under the category of Liars Lying.
Was it a peer reviewer study?
Remember when tobacco companies had doctors testifying there is no danger from smoking or second hand smoke?
When I was a kid my mom took me to see a man with no arms who could play guitar with his feet. He didn't have arms because the doctors told his mother that the medicine she took while pregnant was safe.
There's no theoretical reason to believe these vaccines would be harmful,
Vague. Theoretical.
There's never been any vaccine that's been linked with infertility,
They probably never looked. Scientists favourite answer is 'there's no evidence for that'. What they mean is 'we didn't look'.
Also, CNN ffs.
The CNN article links to a study of NBA players. Total BS:
Here's the "according to the study link" with no matches for the word "pregnant" or "placenta" in the study they are citing.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/2779287?guestAccessKey=9fb714a9-50a9-46b1-a7cc-6c1a91b034c1&utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=042221