Experts confirm it’s Covid Injections & NOT Infections that cause Myocarditis
Despite attempts to blame myocarditis on covid infection, it has clearly risen in incidence only on arrival of the injection programme. Other evidence suggests the incidence after infection seems to be higher in the injected than the uninjected. As always with covid, the story is in the data that has not been shared.
The HART group looked at evidence from various sources including two sources of English data that “look odd and seem to contradict each other” and says “it’s the injections, not the infections that cause myocarditis.”
“[Even when people do not show symptoms of heart damage it matters because] the cells of the heart cannot be replaced. What is worse is that when the cells are killed they leave behind a scar.
“Given the notable rise in cardiac deaths seen recently, there needs to be an investigation of the possibility that heart damage after these injections has led to scarring in hearts causing sudden cardiac deaths.”
Myocarditis began with vaccine rollout
By Health Advisory & Recovery Team (“HART”)
There are two key points regarding post-vaccination heart issues that HART has been raising concerns about since early 2021.
Myocarditis is attributable to injection, not infection
What has been diagnosed may represent wider harm that is yet to be properly measured
Data from multiple sources now concur on important points. However, there is data from England which appears contradictory.
It’s the injections not the infections that cause myocarditis
Many people have claimed that it is the virus that is the underlying cause of myocarditis rather than the vaccinations. There are several ways to check this hypothesis. The obvious one is to compare the rate of myocarditis after infection in:
uninjected uninfected
uninjected infected
injected uninfected
injected infected
Although there have been several epidemiological analyses of myocarditis, that simple comparison is never made. Where uninjected people are looked at specifically, there is no evidence of an increase in incidence. HART has previously summarised the data after infection in the injected compared to the uninjected.
An alternative approach is to look at how common myocarditis is over time. Did the incidence increase with the arrival of covid in 2020 or the arrival of injections in 2021?
There are now several sources of data to answer that question and they all concur.
https://expose-news.com/2023/01/22/covid-injections-not-infections-cause-myocarditis/