COVID VACCINE SAFETY EXPERIMENTS HID RECORDS OF SERIOUS SIDE EFFECTS
COVID VACCINE SAFETY EXPERIMENTS HID RECORDS OF SERIOUS SIDE EFFECTS
Before the worldwide release of Pfizer's Covid-10 vaccine, researchers attempting to determine its safety falsified data and concealed some of the most serious adverse reactions.
On the same day that she alerted the US's drug regulator, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), to illegal practices hiding data on the vaccine's risks, a whistleblower at one of the test sites was let go.
Vestavia Research Group regional director Barbara Jackson has now spoken out to the press, alleging that Pfizer misled data, 'unblinded' patients who did not realize whether they were getting the immunization or a placebo sluggish to investigate vaccine reactions.
In essence, low safety trials underpinned one of the world's largest-ever vaccine roll-out initiatives—and patients were told the immunization was secure when there wasn't enough evidence to back it up.
In her evidence to the BMJ, Jackson wrote that Ventavia's quality control staff were overcome with the volume of issues they had to deal with. She secretly recorded their concerns in September 2020, just a few months before the vaccine's release. A director stated in the conversation, "In my opinion, it is something new every day.
Even though Ventavia had collected 1,000 people for its study, several of them had "severe symptoms or reactions" to the vaccine.
Mary Ann Jackson, a research associate at Medtronic, was terminated from her position on September 24, 2020, after she reported the study's shortcomings to the FDA and voiced her frustrations. She had more than 15 years of clinical trial experience.
The FDA called her a few days later, telling her it couldn't provide further information into any ongoing investigation involving her claims. The vaccine was licensed in December, and no safety concerns were raised about it.
The FDA released the list of nine research locations it had visited throughout the trial period last August, and none of Ventavia's facilities was among them.
After making her allegations, several additional former Vestavia employees have come forward to support her. "I've never had to do what they were asking me to do before," one said in the BMJ. It just appeared like something a little different from normal—the things that were permitted and expected."