Various health problems reported by people after receiving one of the COVID-19 vaccine shots are more likely to have been caused by the vaccines than to be coincidental, according to an analysis of data from the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System.
VAERS has been flooded with more than 1 million reports of various health problems and more than 21,000 death reports since the introduction of the vaccines in late 2020.
A deeper analysis of the data indicates that many of the adverse effects are more than just a coincidence, according to Jessica Rose, a computational biologist who's been studying the data for at least nine months.
In the VAERS data a number of the reported problems are dose-dependent.
Dose-dependency shows up in the VAERS data for other problems as well, including fainting and dizziness, which are more common after the first dose.
To Rose, it seems more likely that if people suffer health problems after an injection of a novel substance and if the problems substantially change between the first and the second shot, the substance probably had something to do with it.
She arrived at the results after she evaluated the VAERS data from the perspective of the Bradford Hill criteria-a set of nine questions that are used by epidemiologists to determine whether any given factor is likely the cause of an observed health effect.
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Wednesday, April 6, 2022
Numerous Health Problems More Likely Because of COVID-19 Vaccines Than Coincidence: VAERS Data Analysis
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