They're calling it PVS, for "post-vaccination syndrome".
Researchers at Yale University have bravely come forth with finding that show the spike protein found in mRNA gene therapy injections from Pfizer and Moderna are present in the body as many as 709 days after injection.
The study will come not as news, but vindication for the stubborn, hoarse crowd of mRNA therapy skeptics. Derided at every turn by Tony Fauci, legacy media, "believe the science" hordes, and even those suffering from vaccine injury (but too invested to think critically about their symptoms), theirs has been a long, frustrating, and even tragic journey.
As journalist Paul Thacker reports on his Substack:
Yale researchers released a study today that posits millions of Americans thought to have Long COVID may have been misdiagnosed and actually have post-vaccination syndrome caused by exposure to the spike protein in COVID vaccines. Spike protein produced by the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines triggers the body’s immune response, and the FDA claimed in a 2023 Politifact fact check that vaccine spike protein is not toxic and does not linger in the body. However, Yale researchers report that some patients, who were never infected with COVID virus, were sick with post-vaccination syndrome (PVS) and had elevated levels of virus spike protein in their blood up to 709 days after vaccination.
“There is considerable overlap in self-reported symptoms between long COVID and PVS, as well as shared exposure to SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) protein in the context of inflammatory responses during infection or vaccination,” noted the study authors.
NIH has poured $1.6 billion into Long COVID research, while ignoring patients harmed by COVID vaccines, causing some well-known patient advocates to hide vaccine injury. After a 13-month battle with Long COVID, Hollywood screenwriter Heidi Ferrer took her own life after deciding death was preferable to another minute in her own “personal hell." Death of the Dawson’s Creek writer made headlines across the media including places such as People, the Guardian, Variety, CNN, Newsweek, and The Daily Mail—each recounting Ferrer’s struggle with Long COVID.
But in a private video circulating among patient groups and obtained by The DisInformation Chronicle, Ferrer’s husband Nick Guthe stated that Moderna’s COVID vaccine was the final straw, causing Heidi to develop tremors and then internal vibrations when she lay down for bed, so that even prescription sleeping pills would not allow her to sleep.
Indeed, one of the lead authors of the study was once a pusher of Covid jab mandates. It takes a true scientist to admit his mistakes and move in the direction of newer findings [ibid.]:
One of the study’s lead authors, Yale Medical School’s Akiko Iwasaki, previously shot down public concerns about COVID vaccine side effects. When Houston Methodist Hospital staffers sued to avoid the hospital’s coronavirus vaccine mandate in 2021, Iwasaki told the Washington Post that the employees’ fears were “absurd” because “no safety concerns” had been found in the mRNA vaccine clinical trials.
Along with other prominent health experts, Iwasaki also signed a petition supporting the OSHA COVID-19 vaccine mandate which the Supreme Court later blocked.
Thacker makes it clear that some of the sources for the Yale study have been labeled false by "fact checkers," but given what we have learned from early on in the pandemic, such broad and often generic dismissals are suspect.
The recent unmasking, so to speak, of the vast reach of USAID tentacles into our mainstream news diet is enough to warrant wariness around any large narrative, especially one that enriched a select few at the expense of the global masses.
Several of the study’s findings as well as research the authors cite in their paper have been labeled as false by federal agencies, medical experts, and fact checkers. Because medical journals have been rejecting studies on vaccine side effects, the authors uploaded their paper to the preprint site medRxiv.
Passages from the paper are examined below, as well as “fake fact checks” with false and misleading statements by federal agencies and medical experts that, in the past, called these new scientific findings fallacious. Hyperlinks to research papers cited by the study authors have been added to replace their footnotes.