Well well well
Large study: HIGHER risk of infection the more vaccine doses you have received
Published 1 January 2023 at 19.40
FOREIGN. In an extensive but not yet officially published study , American researchers show that the risk of being infected with covid-19 increases the more vaccine doses one has received.
The vaccine is questioned
Hundreds of Swedes a week die from corona - nine out of ten deceased are vaccinated
Fria Tider has reported on the large number of vaccinated people in Sweden who are currently admitted to ICU or die from covid-19.
Previously, a greater proportion of unvaccinated than vaccinated people were admitted to intensive care with covid-19. But over the course of 2022, this relationship changed to the opposite. Today, approximately 75 percent of IVA patients are vaccinated, and a whopping 86 percent of those who die with the disease. This is according to the Public Health Authority's statistics.
The American researchers at the Cleveland Clinic have followed over 50,000 employees at their clinic in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the new so-called bivalent corona vaccine, which has been tested on a smaller percentage of employees.
But instead they made a discovery that goes directly against what is officially claimed about the vaccine against covid-19.
Namely, it turned out that the risk of becoming infected increased the more previous vaccine doses a person had received.
"Unexpected"
"The association between increased risk of covid-19 and a higher number of previous vaccine doses in our study was unexpected," state the researchers.
They write that a "simplistic explanation" could be that those who received more doses were more likely to have a higher risk of covid-19. But, the researchers point out, in this case it is in the vast majority of cases young individuals who have had every opportunity to take at least three doses when the study began in September.
"Therefore, those who received fewer than 3 doses (>45% of subjects in the study) were not those who were not eligible to receive the vaccine, but those who chose not to follow the CDC's recommendations to continue receiving booster doses, and one could reasonably expect that these individuals have been more likely to have exhibited risk-taking behavior. Despite this, their risk of contracting covid-19 was lower than those who had received a greater number of previous vaccine doses."
The researchers further note that previous studies have also found a connection between the number of vaccine doses and an increased risk of covid-19.
"It is important to investigate whether multiple vaccine doses given over time may not have the beneficial effect that is generally assumed," they write.
The study from the Cleveland Clinic has not yet been officially published in any scientific publication, which means that it has not yet been peer-reviewed.
https://www.medrxiv.org/conten....t/10.1101/2022.12.17