UM EK17 Q1111
@GaDawg3
14 June, 06:22
Horowitz: Confidential Pfizer document shows the company observed 1.6 million adverse events covering nearly every organ system - Conservative Review
Over 10,000 categories of nearly 1.6 million adverse events – many of them serious and debilitating – brought to you by Pfizer! You might not have heard it in the news, but in recent months, Pfizer’s pharmacovigilance documents requested by the European Union’s drug regulator, the European Medic...
https://www.conservativereview.com/horowitz-confidential-pfizer-document-shows-the-company-observed-1-6-million-adverse-events-covering-nearly-every-organ-system-2661316948.htmlNotice: Undefined index: tg1tga_access in /home/admin/www/anonup.com/themes/default/apps/timeline/post.phtml on line 396
This, again, looks like it just talks about reported adverse events.
Both in the EU and in the US it was a legal requirement to report changes in health after getting the vaccine to some kind of database, regardless of what the cause may have been. If you got the vaxx, then got a cold and went to your GP because you felt sick, that had to be reported.
If you went to see a doctor for recurring migraines that you have had since before the vaxx, it had to be reported. If you had an undiagnosed heart condition, and the time it was discovered happened to be after receiving the vaccine, it had to be reported.
Also, self-reporting was possible in some AE databases and lots of studies simply work that way.
If you want to figure out if there is a cause-and-effect relationship between the vaxx and the reports, you take this data, evaluate it, create statistical models comparing it to the general population, etc. etc.
Taking those numbers and putting them in a headline is pointless.
Both in the EU and in the US it was a legal requirement to report changes in health after getting the vaccine to some kind of database, regardless of what the cause may have been. If you got the vaxx, then got a cold and went to your GP because you felt sick, that had to be reported.
If you went to see a doctor for recurring migraines that you have had since before the vaxx, it had to be reported. If you had an undiagnosed heart condition, and the time it was discovered happened to be after receiving the vaccine, it had to be reported.
Also, self-reporting was possible in some AE databases and lots of studies simply work that way.
If you want to figure out if there is a cause-and-effect relationship between the vaxx and the reports, you take this data, evaluate it, create statistical models comparing it to the general population, etc. etc.
Taking those numbers and putting them in a headline is pointless.
07:31 PM - Jun 14, 2023
In response UM EK17 Q1111 to his Publication
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