- 28 Aug 2021 07:25
#15187548
This is another anecdotal report I want to share with you. I was going home from the airport, taking a shuttle, and me and the driver got to talking.
The woman said she had a friend who, very soon after she had gotten the vaccine, developed a heart arrhythmia. She had no history of any medical conditions before then. Due to the condition she then required heart surgery (I am assuming it must have been an ablation procedure). She has been in the hospital for a week and is still in the hospital as of this writing.
I asked for details, so I could share them here, and the name of this woman who developed a heart arrhythmia is Kayla R, and she currently lives in Wisconsin. She and the driver went to high school together before she moved out of state, and the driver is 35.
There have been a huge number of anecdotal stories like this, and the vaccine is known to cause myocarditis (and probably associated heart problems like this) in rare cases.
This is just yet another anecdotal report, but one wonders how many of these type of incidents there have been and whether they're actually even being counted in the statistics.
There's no way to "prove" these heart conditions are caused by vaccine, and I doubt anyone has conducted any studies to try to identify any possible correlations.
When stories like this don't even get counted in the statistics, one wonders exactly what the real complication rate of the vaccine actually is.
Someone needs to be collecting all this data in a study and analyzing the statistics, but I am not aware of that happening.
Instead, the only statistics they are compiling are from known cases of vaccine complications. It's rather useless to be claiming the vaccine is not causing a higher rate of complications when the only complications you are looking at are ones you already know were caused by the vaccine. That's kind of a Catch-22.
The woman said she had a friend who, very soon after she had gotten the vaccine, developed a heart arrhythmia. She had no history of any medical conditions before then. Due to the condition she then required heart surgery (I am assuming it must have been an ablation procedure). She has been in the hospital for a week and is still in the hospital as of this writing.
I asked for details, so I could share them here, and the name of this woman who developed a heart arrhythmia is Kayla R, and she currently lives in Wisconsin. She and the driver went to high school together before she moved out of state, and the driver is 35.
There have been a huge number of anecdotal stories like this, and the vaccine is known to cause myocarditis (and probably associated heart problems like this) in rare cases.
This is just yet another anecdotal report, but one wonders how many of these type of incidents there have been and whether they're actually even being counted in the statistics.
There's no way to "prove" these heart conditions are caused by vaccine, and I doubt anyone has conducted any studies to try to identify any possible correlations.
When stories like this don't even get counted in the statistics, one wonders exactly what the real complication rate of the vaccine actually is.
Someone needs to be collecting all this data in a study and analyzing the statistics, but I am not aware of that happening.
Instead, the only statistics they are compiling are from known cases of vaccine complications. It's rather useless to be claiming the vaccine is not causing a higher rate of complications when the only complications you are looking at are ones you already know were caused by the vaccine. That's kind of a Catch-22.