For someone who loves plugging unproven medications like hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin to treat coronavirus, dubious WorldNetDaily doc Jane Orient of the fringe-right Association of American Physicians and Surgeons sure loves to fearmonger about coronavirus vaccines, whose efficacy is much more thoroughly documented. Orient served up more fearmongering in her March 18 column, which was also filled with falsehoods under the guise of “a few facts that you should know before getting in line.” First up in her bullet points:
- The products are not vaccines in the usual sense – the dictionary definition had to be changed to call them that. They are experimental biologic agents, a form of gene therapy.
Orient is lying — mRNA vaccines like the ones from Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech are not gene therapy because the RNA does not stay in the body.
- Public health authorities state that none of the 1,637 post-vaccine deaths reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) as of March 8 are provably caused by a COVID vaccine. But the deaths cluster in the first few days (see graphic below) instead of being evenly distributed, and the rate is many times higher than for other vaccines.
In fact, the rate of adverse effects from coronavirus vaccines are comparable to other vaccines.
- It is too soon to evaluate long-term adverse effects, such as autoimmune diseases, cancer, birth defects, impairment of fertility, or antibody-enhanced disease from later virus infection.
Did Orient evaluate the long-term adverse effects of hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin before promoting them?
- Deaths in the vaccinated population may be higher than if they had gotten the disease. Analysts in Israel calculate that in the five-week mass immunization period, 40 times more elderly people and 260 times more younger people died than the disease would have killed during that period.
Not true. it’s a misinterpretation of data leading to flawed conclusions.
- In German nursing homes there were many times more deaths in the two months after the vaccination campaign started than in the entire prior year (see graphic).
Orient offers only an unverified chart from a random German Twitter account in support, but it appears that’s not true either.
Orient the lists among “further information” a column she wrote for the AAPS’ journal in which she pretends she and the AAPS aren’t anti-vaxxers: “Since many physicians will dismiss without consideration any information from a source tarred with an “anti-vax” label, one must state from the outset that AAPS does not oppose vaccination. AAPS does not endorse or oppose specific measures but favor medical interventions, including drugs, surgery, vaccines, or other modalities that have benefits exceeding risks in an individual patient, to which the patient has given informed consent.” But in contradiction to that declaration, Orient also went on a rant against Bill Gates for advocating vaccination efforts.
Orient followed up in her March 31 WND column in which she again attacked the mRNA vaccines, in which she uncritically repeated the outlandish claim that the vaccines “constitute ‘human experimentation,’ which was and still is in violation of the Nuremberg Code.”