WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2024 Poal.co

650

Heart the size of a football at 23 years old. Yikes!

Heart the size of a football at 23 years old. Yikes!

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

I appreciate the intelligent and calm discourse, from you. You're one of the good ones.

Aspiration for vaccinations:

We had a huge meta-analysis done on aspiration for vaccines (and other IM and SC injections) back in 2014. There was no recommendation for aspiration for vaccines, then.

One of the biggest studies for that MA: they performed a Random Control Trial (highest quality research we can do in medical science besides a meta-analyses of RCTs) and found no benefit to aspiration. The only difference they found was less pain in the no-aspiration group.

Another study found this same finding with vaccinations on children, too (far more important to reduce pain and make the procedure as quick as possible).

Finally, a MA was done an RCTs for vaccinations in children. No benefit to aspiration was found but there was a benefit found to not aspirated (less pain, faster).

The most important piece for people like us (who do not want vaccines forced down our throats) is this:

"All complications reported in the literature of intra-arterial injection involved penicillin and other medications and not vaccines"

Here is that huge meta-analysis that includes other MAs and RCTs. It's quite a large document. My takeaway after reading it: other than antibiotics, aspiration is just pure theater/tradition and is a tradition that needs to die. Healthcare workesr should pay attention to injection sites, instead.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5333604/

Thanks for the citation as it explains why aspiration in the case of vaccines is rarely done and why those who do vaccine injections are no longer trained to aspirate to the point of them not knowing what aspiration is.

From your citation:

If the drugs to be given have potentially fatal consequences in the event of systemic administration (as in the case of immunotherapy), all possible precautions must be taken. This is even more important in cases where the drug is being administered electively by specialist staff. On the other hand, if there are no serious known sequelae to a drug being injected systemically – as in the case of vaccines – an argument can be made not to aspirate, especially since a huge number of immunizations are performed globally by vaccinators and health workers.

What they're saying is that whether to aspirate or not depends on the consequences of systemic (ie bloodstream) administration. According to them, traditional vaccines don't pose a risk even if injected into the bloodstream.

The mRNA 'vaccines' are not vaccines in the traditional sense. We don't know the effects of a bloodstream injection because it has not been studied. And we know why it has not been studied--everone involved has a blanket legal immunity. The spike protein causes myocarditis and issues in other organs. This was the point I was making in my initial comment. Given the small downsides to aspiration (potentially more painful injection, some AD needles not being designed for aspiration, potentially wasting doses of the drug) and large potential downsides, we should be aspirating prior to injection for covid vaccines until we know, that is, until we have data, that it's safe to not aspirate.