Israeli researchers found some side effects that occurred after COVID-19 vaccination were caused by Pfizer’s vaccine
- The Israeli Ministry of Health (MoH) commissioned researchers to analyze adverse event reports submitted by Israelis and the researchers presented findings from the new surveillance system in an internal June 2022 meeting
- Researchers said that the phenomenon of rechallenge-when adverse events reoccur or worsen following additional vaccine doses-proved that some of the events were cause by the vaccine.
- Rechallenge changes a causal link from possible to definitive.
Rechallenge
- This is one of the factors to determine causality and refers to the re-administration of the same vaccine or drug after an adverse event goes away to examine whether the same event occurs again.
- Dr. Robert Malone, who helped develop the messenger RNA (mRNA) technology on which Pfizer’s vaccine is built, told The Epoch Times that rechallenge is a "standard pharmaceutical clinical trial practice" that can provide definitive proof of causality.
Other Findings Not Made Public
- The data presented in June was collected from December 2021 to May.
- Of the 6,259 reports presented, 599 were for children aged 5 to 11, 299 for adolescents aged 12 to 17, and 5,411 for adults 18 and older
- More women than men completed the questionnaire
- A total of 29 categories of adverse events were identified
US Connection
- Israel has often been the first country to report on vaccine safety and effectiveness
- Dr. Sharon Alroy-Preis, an Israeli official who has said she's in charge of vaccine safety monitoring, has presented data four times to the CDC and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration since September 2021
- Under the old system, reports could be submitted anonymously to the ministry's website
- Reports could not be verified, making it impossible to conduct reliable analyses of the data
- The new system requires people to input their identities and other information along with details of the adverse event
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