HHS Removes Four More Vaccines From Childhood Immunization List

HHS Removes Four More Vaccines From Childhood Immunization List

STATEWIDE - In another unprecedented move, the Department of Health and Human Services under Robert F. Kennedy has just issued information stating it will be removing four vaccines from the recommendations for the Childhood Immunization schedule. 

According to HHS, the department is moving vaccines for rotavirus, influenza, meningococcal disease, and hepatitis to ‘shared decision-making between parents and healthcare providers.’ Additionally, the HHS is now only recommending shots for 11 total ailments based on research models from Danish studies all stemming from a presidential memorandum to revise the vaccine schedule

The move is a unique strike against a strongly pharma-focused approach to childhood health which had become increasingly bogged down by vaccine interventions with minimal strong science to justify and copious reports of adverse health effects, attempting to slide vaccinations for what was previously considered standard illnesses such as stomach flu (rotavirus) and influenza, with many of the vaccines on the market causing more harm than good.

Most recently, Astrazeneca received approval for a ‘FluMist’, self-administered live-virus vaccine that has been mailed out to people’s houses. It is the first self-administered vaccine approved on the market, including for children 2 and older and already has some significant warning signs. Influenza vaccines in general have been shown to actually exacerbate illnesses in individuals who receive them, increase mortality in the elderly and make childhood illnesses worse. This is all independent of the constant aluminum exposure from the adjuvants in standard influenza vaccines which increases likelihood of Alzheimer's and dementia.

The recently approved ‘FluMist’ drug being used by adults currently is actually far worse, if one can imagine. The drug has a ‘shedding period’ in which recipients will be shedding live virus from the vaccine for around 28 days and the risk to pregnant and nursing women is currently unknown. In adults, it did not even show efficacy in even preventing febrile illness.

According to Open VAERS there have been at least 10,369 adverse event reports following FluMist administration, though it is likely much higher as VAERS reporting is significantly minimized and reflects only 1% of the actual.

Removing the unnecessary and potentially harmful vaccinations from the current childhood recommendation list is an even bigger step towards restoring trust in the medical establishment, which has historically been a damaging force on individual health. 

The HHS decision memo can be read below.

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