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Cholera outbreaks predicted using climate data and AI
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International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health has, according to the authors, discovered that vaccinated children require far more healthcare than unvaccinated children. At least that’s what they found from the group of children used to collect the data.
(Article by Arjun Walia republished from LewRockwell.com)
This type of study is interesting to see given the fact that studies comparing unvaccinated children to vaccinated children are lacking, there aren’t many of them. These studies are, as the authors state, “rarely conducted.”
The study concludes that “the unvaccinated children in this practice are not, overall, less healthy than the vaccinated and that indeed the vaccinated children appear to be significantly less healthy than the unvaccinated.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health reveals that vaccinated children are
less healthy than their unvaccinated peers.
Dr. James Lyons-Weiler from the
Integrative Pediatrics in Portland looked at 10 years’ worth of data on a cohort of child patients, all of whom were born into a specific practice. Some of these patients were vaccinated according to the official government schedule while others received an alternate schedule. Still others received no vaccinations at all.
This unique study design of evaluating the health outcomes of variable vaccination on child patients who were all born into the same practice allowed Drs. Lyons-Weiler and Thomas to achieve greater accuracy with fewer external factors that may have skewed the results.
Recommendations to prevent SARS-CoV-2 spread via aerosols in hospitals and nursing homes
A variety of measures are necessary to prevent the spread of the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 in hospitals and nursing homes. It is particularly important to develop an appropriate strategy to protect healthcare workers from airborne transmission.
Researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) in Leipzig, the CSIR National Physical Laboratory in New Delhi, the Institute of Atmospheric Science and Climate (ISAC) in Rome and 2B Technologies, Colorado recommend that more attention is required in respect to indoor air in such facilities and to further training of the staff. From an aerosol experts point of view, it is necessary to combine these different measures, the research team writes in an Editorial article in the
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