Florida physician: "I've seen five kidney cancers in young patients. I usually see one kidney cancer every decade of my practice."
Chief of Oncology at a major hospital: "In young people, I'll see maybe one astrocytoma brain cancer a year. I've seen five after the boosters rolled out in the last month."
Another physician: "My 21-year-old son got the booster. Now he has a salivary gland cancer."
A family physician from Ireland: "I have seen the weirdest cancers after the shot rollout."
@VigilantFox
Salivary gland cancer?
The only case of that I've ever heard of was baseball legend Tony Gwynn, who got it from chewing tobacco most of his life. It killed him at age 54.
That was eight years ago.
My sister-in-law died of this in 2007. She was 42. She had fought it for about 4 years before she died. It is not a fun cancer to have - in her case she had to live with a facial deformity due to the tumour removal for 4 years before it spread to her lungs and killed her.
She never smoked or chewed tobacco or anything. I don't think she had any risk factors.
That's terrible, and sorry to hear it. There's still fallout from nuclear weapons testing, and that settles all over foods crops when it rains, and now there's fukushima to consider. Not to mention what they spray on there intentionally
I'm sorry that happened to you. That sounds horrible.
That's basically what happened to Gwynn as well--it paralyzed half his face and robbed us of his great smile.
That is absolutely horrifying. I’m sorry for your loss. How awful.
Thank you.