"Swissmedic announced Wednesday it was investigating cases of bubble formation in a batch of bivalent booster shots developed by Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) and BioNTech (NASDAQ:BNTX) to protect against the original COVID-19 virus and Omicron BA.1 subvariant."
The batch already contained bubbles in some of its vials at the time of removal from refrigeration, Swissmedic said, adding that the incidence appeared to worsen “when the syringes are prepared several hours in advance.
Until the investigations are complete, the regulator recommends that the vials containing bubbles or particles should not be used, and syringes should not be filled more than 15 minutes before the administration.
Pfizer (PFE) was not immediately available for comments."
"... the regulator recommends that the vials containing bubbles or particles should not be used..."
If it were ANY other food industry... the presence of any contaminants in a batch would require the immediate recall and disposal of the entire LOT. You don't just toss the few vials that had "bubbles or particles"... and assume the rest of the lot is safe.
Does anybody still trust these people to inject things directly into your arteries?
Normally all pharmaceuticals would have pretty stringent testing on particles (https://www.uspnf.com/sites/default/files/usp_pdf/EN/USPNF/revisionGeneralChapter788.pdf) and would need to use degassed water for injectables.
But go ahead and see if you can get a certificate of analysis (CoA) for any of these jabs.
Each new booster is just another human trial for the drug companies. imo