As a "vaccinated" man, in his 30's, with newfound mild chest pain, I find this extremely frustrating that they would censor this. I'm currently doing tests with doctors to see what's going on, and there is no clear cause, as of yet.
The problem with this VAERS data is that it doesn't seem to clearly show time delay of heart issues following the clot shots. I got the J&J shot in April. Only in October have I started to have chest discomfort. So is this related to the shot, or is this related to something else? Difficult to say. It seems most adverse reactions to the shots occur shortly after injection, as far as I can tell. A 6-month late onset of chest issues directly related to the shot seems unlikely. The "anti-covid" effects of the J&J shot are reduced to from 80% to 3% following 6 months, so I assume that means the shot mostly dissipates, including its ability to damage DNA and my essential organs. But these are assumptions.
Anyone able to share evidence-based thoughts on time delay of vaccine injuries would be appreciated.
I saw an interview with one of these famous 'pro-hesitancy' doctors who said if the vaccine damages your capillaries so they regularly clot it'll make your heart work too hard and over time, I think he said like 1-3 years if I remember right, you'll develop heart attacks. Presumably the heart is designed around a balance between difficulty pushing blood out and pressure of it going back in, and when that balance is off it goes to heck.
I don't remember the interview or who it was so the capillary thing may not be true or accurate, but there are problems that take a long time to develop.
For normal vaccines if nothing bad happens in the first few weeks we say it's fine not because we expect all the problems to happen immediately, but because we have identical vaccine technology in use for decades. We're just going to have to wait and see how much long-term damage the new technology does - which could be mostly nothing, we just don't know.
Stress on capillaries is an interesting thesis, as well as commentary on time to develop issues related to long duration over-stressing the heart. I might start wearing a heart rate monitor to monitor and see.
I feel like such a fucking idiot for taking this stupid ass vaccine. Although I suppose I'd just be thinking it was a covid long-haul issue if I hadn't had the vaccine. I had covid in early 2020.
No matter what decision one makes on the vaccine there's plenty of opportunity to feel stupid.
Only thing we can do is make the best, informed decisions that we can. Like if your heart has been hurting recently skip the treadmill until you know you are better. I wonder how much of the heart problems men have with the vaccine are just from trying to power through it or not taking it seriously.
As a "vaccinated" man, in his 30's, with newfound mild chest pain, I find this extremely frustrating that they would censor this. I'm currently doing tests with doctors to see what's going on, and there is no clear cause, as of yet.
The problem with this VAERS data is that it doesn't seem to clearly show time delay of heart issues following the clot shots. I got the J&J shot in April. Only in October have I started to have chest discomfort. So is this related to the shot, or is this related to something else? Difficult to say. It seems most adverse reactions to the shots occur shortly after injection, as far as I can tell. A 6-month late onset of chest issues directly related to the shot seems unlikely. The "anti-covid" effects of the J&J shot are reduced to from 80% to 3% following 6 months, so I assume that means the shot mostly dissipates, including its ability to damage DNA and my essential organs. But these are assumptions.
Anyone able to share evidence-based thoughts on time delay of vaccine injuries would be appreciated.
I saw an interview with one of these famous 'pro-hesitancy' doctors who said if the vaccine damages your capillaries so they regularly clot it'll make your heart work too hard and over time, I think he said like 1-3 years if I remember right, you'll develop heart attacks. Presumably the heart is designed around a balance between difficulty pushing blood out and pressure of it going back in, and when that balance is off it goes to heck.
I don't remember the interview or who it was so the capillary thing may not be true or accurate, but there are problems that take a long time to develop.
For normal vaccines if nothing bad happens in the first few weeks we say it's fine not because we expect all the problems to happen immediately, but because we have identical vaccine technology in use for decades. We're just going to have to wait and see how much long-term damage the new technology does - which could be mostly nothing, we just don't know.
Stress on capillaries is an interesting thesis, as well as commentary on time to develop issues related to long duration over-stressing the heart. I might start wearing a heart rate monitor to monitor and see.
I feel like such a fucking idiot for taking this stupid ass vaccine. Although I suppose I'd just be thinking it was a covid long-haul issue if I hadn't had the vaccine. I had covid in early 2020.
No matter what decision one makes on the vaccine there's plenty of opportunity to feel stupid.
Only thing we can do is make the best, informed decisions that we can. Like if your heart has been hurting recently skip the treadmill until you know you are better. I wonder how much of the heart problems men have with the vaccine are just from trying to power through it or not taking it seriously.