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. . . But this is all highly speculative. For one thing, the report does not include data on whether pregnant people whose fetuses were diagnosed with the rare condition even had COVID-19 during their pregnancies—and how their rates of SARS-CoV-2 infection compared with those in pregnancies without situs inversus. It also does not include data on genetic and environmental factors that are known to be linked to situs inversus. And, notably, even though cases of situs inversus quadrupled, it was still very rare overall, and no such spikes were reported in other waves of SARS-CoV-2 infections, including after the pandemic first began in China in late 2019.

As such, the authors acknowledge that "no conclusions" can be drawn from the current report as to the cause of the unusual spike. However, they call for further research to understand what was behind the uptick and the possible role of SARS-CoV-2. The good news is that most people with situs inversus have normal life spans.

>. . . But this is all highly speculative. For one thing, the report does not include data on whether pregnant people whose fetuses were diagnosed with the rare condition even had COVID-19 during their pregnancies—and how their rates of SARS-CoV-2 infection compared with those in pregnancies without situs inversus. It also does not include data on genetic and environmental factors that are known to be linked to situs inversus. And, notably, even though cases of situs inversus quadrupled, it was still very rare overall, and no such spikes were reported in other waves of SARS-CoV-2 infections, including after the pandemic first began in China in late 2019. >As such, the authors acknowledge that "no conclusions" can be drawn from the current report as to the cause of the unusual spike. However, they call for further research to understand what was behind the uptick and the possible role of SARS-CoV-2. The good news is that most people with situs inversus have normal life spans. [Source Article](https://arstechnica.com/health/2023/11/bizarre-blip-cases-of-fetuses-with-flipped-organs-quadrupled-in-china/)

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

With all the adulterated food, fake medicine, chemical exposure and harmful environmental factors in china, I would put those teratogenic factors way ahead of (((covid))) on the list of causes. China is literally making fake eggs, fake meat, fake rice and even recycling cooking oil retrieved from the gutters and "cleaned up" for resale. None of those things are remotely conducive to good health and pregnancies, especially combined with the terrible chemical-laden air and water pollution. Expect more of this from the country that doesn't give a shit about its people if there is a buck to be made and a chance to show the world how great they are (even though no one is buying that).

[–] 1 pt

Could very well be the case. IIRC, there was fake baby formula a while back too.

[–] 1 pt

China also did not have an mRNA (or “mod RNA”) COVID-19 vaccine like Western countries did. It was probably poisonous in its own ways, but it didn’t turn your body into a spike protein factory that ended up attacking itself.