Twitter banned her account, right after this hot piece of truth.
(media.greatawakening.win)
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And here is the counter argument to those "shedding" articles:
https://www.nebraskamed.com/COVID/the-covid-19-vaccines-irregular-periods-and-spike-protein-shedding
Links to the clinical trial protocol document for phases 1, 2 and 3 of the Pfizer clinical trial are spreading on social media. There’s a lot of confusion about what the information in that document means.
There are some fake versions floating around, so here is a link to the original document listed on Pfizer.com.
A clinical trial protocol is a document that describes the rules for a clinical trial. All clinical trials must have a clinical trial protocol before they begin. The protocol outlines the goal of the study, explains how it’s designed and provides instructions for the health care providers conducting the study.
On page 67 of this document, there’s a section titled “Regulatory Reporting Requirements for SAEs.” SAEs stands for Serious Adverse Events. In this section, the document lists events that should be reported, including various types of exposure. “Exposure” just means that someone somehow came in contact with the substance being studied. And “study intervention” refers to the vaccine itself – the medicine (intervention) being studied.
This document is not discussing viral shedding, or even indicating that there’s a potential for viral shedding. It also is not actually reporting adverse events. It is just telling health care providers how to document and track various types of potential adverse events.
According to the data submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for review, 23 pregnancies were reported after the clinical trial began. There were 12 in the vaccine group and 11 in the placebo group. Two of these 23 women reported adverse events, but both were in the placebo group.
Pregnant women are usually excluded from clinical trials. However, Pfizer began officially enrolling pregnant women into their ongoing COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial in February. More data will likely become available later this fall.