Pfizer Doctor Worries COVID Vax Impacts Women’s Reproductive Health (Video)

Project Veritas, a non-profit journalism group, recently published a video of a conversation between an undercover journalist and Dr. Jordon Walker, a senior Pfizer executive who didn’t know he was being recorded.

Dr. Walker, Director of Research and Development at Pfizer, in the video expresses concern over the possible side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine on women’s reproductive health, specifically pointing to irregular menstrual cycles.

Dr. Walker says, “There is something irregular about the menstrual cycles. So, people will have to investigate that down the line because that is a little concerning.”

The doctor goes on to worry about the vaccine affecting women’s menstrual cycles.

“The vaccine shouldn’t be interfering with that. So, we don’t really know,” he says, adding that “the science” suggests the vaccine should not be affecting the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis (HPG axis), which are the “hormones that regulate their menstrual cycle and things like that,” according to the doctor.

When questioned by the reporter about the impact of the vaccine on fertility, Dr. Walker says, “Yeah, because they control the cycle. So if it’s impacting that, it must be impacting these hormones somehow. But then we need to find out how it’s impacting these hormones because the signaling starts in the brain.”

Walker goes on to say that he hopes “we don’t discover something really bad down the line. I hope we don’t find out that somehow this mRNA lingers in the body” because “it has to be affecting something hormonal to impact menstrual cycles.”

Despite Dr. Walker’s concerns, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) still recommends COVID-19 vaccines for everyone aged 6 months and older, including pregnant women and those trying to conceive.

American Faith recently reported how multiple peer-reviewed studies have found that COVID-19 vaccines and the virus itself may impact menstrual cycles in women. A study of almost 4,000 women in the U.S. found an average extension of 0.7 days in cycle length after one dose and 0.9 days after two doses of a COVID vaccine. Another study in Japan found a similar trend, with an average difference in menstrual cycle length increasing by 0.6 days after one dose and 0.6-1 days after two doses. A third study of 5,000 women in six Arab countries found that vaccinated individuals reported more frequent back pain, nausea, tiredness, pelvic pain, and heavy bleeding in connection with their menstruation compared to unvaccinated individuals.

American Faith also reported in Aug 2021 how Dr. Michael Yeadon, former Vice President and Chief Scientist for Allergy and Respiratory research for Pfizer Inc., expressed concern about the safety of COVID-19 vaccines for women of childbearing potential. He claimed that reproductive toxicology has not been undertaken for these vaccines and that they have not been tested for their impact on fertilization and development of the baby. He cited a report showing that the vaccine concentrates in the ovaries of rats, which he assumes is also happening in women. He also cited a study that showed 15 women who received the Pfizer vaccine had a 300% increase in antibodies against the placenta. Dr. Yeadon believes that this is a vaccine-induced autoimmune attack on the placenta and warned women of childbearing potential not to accept them.

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