Eegore
Serious Thumper
   
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Posts: 9095
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Still confused.
Do women who are pregnant, who have gotten the c-19 (variant) vaccine, have more miscarriages than those that don't ?
The statements from the few sources I listed in the first post, have been determined to be; "...Almost all of it is CDC sourced information...".
So when you read through those articles and looked at the references provided for their outcomes, where are those references from? My examination, and their own statements indicate the CDC. The CDC, PBS, and the NEJM references you offered contain the largest data-pools and those are from CDC information. Most of the actual data is CDC sourced. What is confusing about that? All of the information about miscarriages you provided says black women had the most miscarriages, and are the least vaccinated.
So when fullfact.org says; "...There is no scientific reason the vaccine might be expected to affect pregnancy. A new, as yet not peer-reviewed, study looking at 2,456 pregnant women who got an mRNA vaccine (such as those from Moderna or Pfizer) before they conceived or up to 20 weeks found there was no increased chance of miscarriage...."
And when.medical.net Says; "... The average miscarriage rate among pregnant women receiving any COVID-19 vaccines was 9%. The risk of miscarriage among the COVID-19 vaccinated group, compared with the unvaccinated group, showed no significant difference in miscarriage rate ..."
Then.statnews.com says; "... Sometimes when scientists study things, they come up with results they didn’t expect, can’t explain, and may secretly wish they’d never sought. A new journal article looking at whether getting a flu shot during pregnancy increases a woman’s risk of miscarrying may be one such case. The article reports that at least in the 2010-11 and 2011-12 influenza seasons, pregnant women who were vaccinated against flu may have been at a higher risk of suffering a miscarriage — but only if they had also received a flu shot in the previous year as well..." (Yes Vigrnia it says Flu shot not c-19 shot, yet many people believe the 'annual' flus shot is in the same, 'efective' range as the c-19 varents).
So again 3 more opinions, differ. (and just in two days, the majority of, 'places' deny and provide different reasons, it is not true)
I would say the first two opinions do not differ, and the third is about a totally different medication. The first two claim miscarriages do not increase with the Covid vaccines. The third says miscarriages do increase with a flu shot.
"(Yes Vigrnia it says Flu shot not c-19 shot, yet many people believe the 'annual' flus shot is in the same, 'efective' range as the c-19 varents)"
Effectiveness on treating two different illnesses is irrelevant if the chemistry of the medication is not consistently similar. Flu shots are not MRNA Covid vaccines made at "Warp Speed" with almost no clinical trials, they have decades of documented development cycles. I would not use flu shots as a comparison to Covid vaccines as the chemistry of them share minimal similarities. The political nonsense behind them is similar, but the physical chemistry is not.
If we use "effective range" as the only criteria for comparing miscarriage danger we might as well say any medication with the same timeframe of effectiveness as a Covid vaccine is also potentially causing miscarriages. That makes no sense. The drug chemistry causes miscarriages, not the timeframe they are effective.
So again, if someone is looking for info, and is told a thing called, 'Thalidomide', is perfectly safe. Should they believe the c-19 varieties are 'safe' or not ?
If using Thalidomide as a comparative value, and not miscarriage rates, the political component is similar in many medications. This in theory should apply to all known medications as they enter the market. Any medication could be a future Thalidomide.
I wouldn't use any other medication research as evidence that a different medication is safe unless that medication shares a similar physical chemistry. I would however use a history of politics, finance policy/records and sociological research to look into issues like Thalidomide.
So to avoid confusion: I wouldn't try to spin the data, I won't even read, to make claims that medications like Thalidomide/flu-shot and the Covid vaccine are dangerous because they are similar in some way. I would instead use political research, with information I actually read through, to offer evidence as to why I am suspicious.
I would not copy/paste articles I never read, then argue with people who read them for me.
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