- The CDC published a non-peer-reviewed study claiming COVID vaccines were 76% effective against emergency/urgent care visits for young children and 56% for older kids, but only 3% of those visits actually confirmed COVID, with very few positive tests overall.
- A UCLA health sciences researcher and former JAMA deputy editor accused the CDC of misleading the public by using “anything but objective” phrasing that exaggerated benefits and referenced “severe disease” without supporting data on severity or outcomes.
- Media outlets like the Associated Press and NBC News amplified the study to claim vaccines prevent “severe illness” in healthy kids, despite the lack of evidence for true severity or deaths prevented.
- A large Harvard-led study of 2.7 million children in Spain during the Omicron peak found no COVID deaths in either vaccinated or unvaccinated kids, concluding that both risks and benefits of vaccination were “small.”
- The Spanish study showed very low vaccine effectiveness against hospitalization (9% for ages 6-11, 45% for 12-17), requiring roughly 38,000 doses to prevent just one hospitalization.
- Severe COVID outcomes remain extremely rare in children, with CDC data showing under 1 death per 100,000 minors in recent seasons, undermining the need for widespread vaccination in healthy kids.
- Critics highlight known risks like myocarditis from mRNA vaccines, with separate Stanford research showing elevated rates (e.g., 1 in 32,000 after a second dose), potentially outweighing minimal benefits in low-risk groups.
- The CDC’s approach is seen as resisting scrutiny from HHS leaders amid efforts to reduce childhood vaccine recommendations, pandering to media for favorable headlines rather than presenting balanced evidence.
Read the full story: https://justthenews.com/accountability/watchdogs/cdc-misled-public-study-implying-covid-vaccines-save-healthy-kids-ucla
What Would You Do If Pharmacies Couldn’t Provide You With Crucial Medications or Antibiotics?
The medication supply chain from China and India is more fragile than ever since Covid. The US is not equipped to handle our pharmaceutical needs. We’ve already seen shortages with antibiotics and other medications in recent months and pharmaceutical challenges are becoming more frequent today.
Our partners at Jase Medical offer a simple solution for Americans to be prepared in case things go south. Their “Jase Case” gives Americans emergency antibiotics they can store away while their “Jase Daily” offers a wide array of prescription drugs to treat the ailments most common to Americans.
They do this through a process that embraces medical freedom. Their secure online form allows board-certified physicians to prescribe the needed drugs. They are then delivered directly to the customer from their pharmacy network. The physicians are available to answer treatment related questions.


