A recent study published in medRxiv has revealed that receiving multiple vaccines may actually increase the risk of contracting COVID-19. The study looked at data from over one million people in the United States and found that those who had received more than seven vaccines in their lifetime had a higher risk of testing positive for COVID-19.
The study used data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Immunization Survey, which tracks the number of vaccines administered to US citizens. The researchers found that people who had received more than seven vaccines were more likely to test positive for COVID-19 than those who had received fewer vaccines.
The risk of testing positive increased with each additional vaccine. The researchers believe that this increased risk may be due to a phenomenon known as “vaccine interference,” which occurs when different vaccines interact with each other in a way that reduces their effectiveness.
This could mean that the vaccines may interfere with the body’s ability to fight off infections, including COVID-19.
Another study on the Covid-19 Vaccine in a peer-reviewed scientific journal concluded that mRNA vaccines immensely increase a person’s risk of cancer and susceptibility to infectious diseases.
The study also found that the spike proteins within mRNA vaccines are neurotoxic and cause severe illnesses including neurodegenerative disease, myocarditis, bells palsy, liver disease, thrombocytopenia, tumorigenesis, and impaired DNA damage response.
From the abstract of the study:
“We identify potential profound disturbances in regulatory control of protein synthesis and cancer surveillance. These disturbances potentially have a causal link to neurodegenerative disease, myocarditis, immune thrombocytopenia, Bell’s palsy, liver disease, impaired adaptive immunity, impaired DNA damage response, and tumorigenesis.”
Highlights from the study summarize that mRNA vaccines promote sustained synthesis of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, the spike protein is neurotoxic, impairs DNA repair mechanisms, suppresses type I interferon responses resulting in impaired innate immunity, and causes increased risk of infectious diseases and cancer.
Another study from late November found a direct causal relationship between an increase in deaths in countries with higher levels of vaccinations.
The study analyzed publicly available COVID-19 data that ranged across 145 countries to determine the causal effect of the vaccines on total deaths per million people and total cases per million people.
In September another study published in the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) found no discernible relationship between levels of vaccination and COVID-19 case rates.
In that study, scientists investigated the relationship between the percentage of the population fully vaccinated compared to new COVID-19 cases across 68 countries and across 2947 counties in the US.
At the country level, they found that there appears to be no relationship whatsoever between how many people are fully vaccinated and the number of COVID-19 cases.
In fact, the researchers say, the trend line suggests a positive association between countries with a higher percentage of the population fully vaccinated and a higher rate of COVID-19 cases per 1 million people.