Comprehensive Review Finds Health Problems From mRNA Technology

A review in the journal Biomedicines detailed that the mRNA in COVID-19 vaccines is pathogenic.

As “unprecedented high rates of adverse events” have eclipsed the idea of “safe and effective” vaccines, a group of scientists sought to “provide a thorough overview of harms arising from the new technology in vaccines that relied on human cells producing a foreign antigen that has evidence of pathogenicity,” the study reads.

The authors found several COVID-19 vaccine issues requiring analysis, namely, that the spike protein “both from the virus and also when produced by gene codes in the novel COVID-19 mRNA and adenovectorDNA vaccines” is toxic.

Upon analyzing literature providing evidence for the toxicity of the spike protein, the researchers determined that it is critical to “evaluate the potential for any new autoimmune phenomena driven by foreign antigen production caused by any new mRNA or DNA-based technology in the future.”

The authors presented a list of key points in their review, some of which included:

  • “Production of foreign proteins such as spike protein on cell surfaces can induce autoimmune responses and tissue damage. This has profoundly negative implications for any future mRNA-based drug or vaccine.”
  • “Adverse event data from official pharmacovigilance databases, an FDA-Pfizer report obtained via FOI, show high rates and multiple organ systems affected: primarily neurological, cardiovascular, and reproductive.”
  • “Pfizer and Moderna mRNA COVID-19 vaccines’ clinical trial data independently interpreted has been peer-review and published to show an unfavourable risk/benefit, especially in the non-elderly. The risks for children clearly outweigh the benefits.”
  • “Repeated COVID-19 vaccine booster doses appear to induce tolerance and may contribute to recurrent COVID-19 infection and ‘long COVID.’”
  • “Treatment modalities for ‘spikeopathy’-related pathology in many organ systems, require urgent research and provision to millions of sufferers of long-term COVID-19 vaccine injuries.”

In their discussion of their findings, the authors noted that spike proteins may eventually contribute to “immune tolerance,” where immune cells are prevented from responding to a toxin.

The authors concluded that medical professionals “need to be mindful of the varied possible presentations of COVID-19 vaccine-related illness, both acute and chronic, and the worsening of pre-existing conditions,” adding that they “also advocate for the suspension of gene-based COVID-19 vaccines and lipid-nanoparticle carrier matrices, and other vaccines based on mRNA or viral-vectorDNA technology.”