mardi 5 janvier 2021

(Le vaccin russe, sputnik 5, et ses effets indésirables. note de rené)


HOW A LIBERAL JOURNALIST DESCRIBED THE “TERRIBLE EFFECTS OF THE SPUTNIK VACCINE”

 January 5, 2021 source : Stalker Zon.org

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Meduza [a fifth-column/liberal outlet in Russia – ed] journalist Svetlana Reyter took part in a trial of the Russian vaccine. During all the process, she kept an online diary, tearfully describing how her liberal body is heavily beaten, cracked and flattened by Putin’s dubious pharmacy. After 3 months, it turned out that she was given a placebo…

But what’s more interesting here is the rate at which people participating in vaccine trials ruin the study, exit the study, and go for a payable vaccination. And then they will say that “… Sputnik has not yet passed the third phase of testing!!!”.

Well, what did the “Meduza” journalist do next?

The first vaccination was given to the woman on September 21st. Unpleasant sensations appeared the next day. In her diary, Svetlana wrote::

“September 22. Dizzy, weak. The injection area hurts a little.

September 24. Runny nose, absolutely cold condition, aching muscles. My head began to ache again. Weakness. In the evening, the doctor calls, says that the side effects can last for several days — if it is a vaccine: ‘I hear on the phone, you have a runny nose and your voice is very tired’

September 25. I feel weak, chills, muscle aches. It is impossible to get out of bed. My head hurts. Could it be covid? The doctor calls me. He says that this is, unfortunately, possible.”

Svetlana even did a PCR test, which gave a negative result.

“Aching muscles, terrible neck pain.”

The next portion of torment fell to the lot of the journalist after the second vaccination, received, as expected, three weeks later – on October 12th. Svetlana described this in the second part of her diary. Before the second injection, the woman told the doctor about her feelings:

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” – ‘Doctor, you might be interested. You know, I still have a pain in my arm, where the first injection was made, and it’s already been three weeks.’

– ‘It’s possible’.

– ‘And you know, such a weakness, either autumn, or your vaccine’.

– ‘It’s possible‘.”

Within a few hours after the second vaccination, Svetlana began to feel ill:

“16:36 Sharply stuffy nose, muscle aches and a feeling of heat.

18:06 My head started to hurt.

23:44 My muscles still ache, my neck hurts a lot”

The next day, the author of the diary continued to have a headache, a sore throat. Then, however, unpleasant sensations were not mentioned.

“The word ‘placebo’ sounded like a court verdict”

After waiting 42 days after the first injection (the period of immunity formation during vaccination), Svetlana passed an antibody test. The journalist did not specify what kind of analysis it was – after all, after vaccination, specific antibodies are formed that are not detectable by a conventional test.

However, according to Svetlana, she received “a verbal comment from an acquaintance who was well versed in tests. The word ‘placebo’ sounded like a court verdict. It was really scary.”

As a result, the correspondent of “Meduza” wrote that she found herself in a very unpleasant situation:

“By the end of December, the situation looked like this: in fact, anyone who was already 18 years old could be vaccinated in Moscow. Only voluntary participants of the clinical trial – 32,000 people – were not vaccinated. A quarter of them received a placebo — about 7,500 unlucky persons. Unlucky persons who wanted to get the vaccine first, but will get it last.

Leaving the placebo group is not so easy — you can exit the clinical trial, but the clinical trial will not exit you. A week after leaving the study, I came to the nearest polyclinic for vaccination.

‘No, don’t even try,’ the doctor told me. The first page of United Medical Information and Analytical System of Moscow (EMIAS) was open on her computer. Next to my name was an inscription in large red letters — ‘Clinical Research Participant’.

– I exited the study, look, there should be a mark inside. There is no research in fact, everyone left. I was told that it’s possible to exit and get vaccinated together with everyone else.

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– ‘No, you didn’t exit.’

– ‘No, I did.’

– ‘Do you see the inscription in red next to your name? As long as it is there, you have not exited’.”

In order to exit, go to a payable clinic

Nevertheless, Svetlana managed to get vaccinated:

“When a volunteer from the placebo group is kicked out of the clinic, they have two options: go to clinics in the Moscow region that do not have access to the EMIAS system and no red inscriptions are visible to anyone, or go to a private clinic that also has the Sputnik V vaccine.

I chose the second option, and it worked 100%. In the registry of one of the private clinics in Moscow, I was asked only one question: do I have a Moscow residence permit and compulsory health insurance. The price of the first dose is 1850 rubles.”

Separately, Svetlana noted that, to her surprise, there were even more people on the paid vaccine than on the free one:

“Registration is tight, there are a lot of applicants. ‘Maybe it’s just that not everyone trusts free medicine,’ suggested the registry.

Then — a quick checkup with a therapist who asks standard questions: age, height, weight, whether I have an allergy (no), whether I have chronic diseases (also no). I’m waiting for a question about participation in a clinical trial (yes, damn it), but I still don’t get asked.

In addition to me, a woman in her 70s (she says she doesn’t trust free medicine), a man in his early 40s (he doesn’t talk about his reasons for choosing this clinic), a girl in her 20s (she pretends not to have heard my question), and a middle-aged woman (a housewife, she heard on TV that so far only at-risk groups can be vaccinated for free).” 

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