Vaccine-induced sicknesses increase exponentially in infants with each additional vaccine

In the research article, “Adverse Outcomes Are Increased with Exposure to Added Combinations of Infant Vaccines,” published in the International Journal of Vaccine Theory, Practice, and Research, Children’s Health Defense (CHD) scientists reveal the sheer number of vaccine-induced diseases in infants and children increases exponentially– more than doubling– with every vaccine added.

The CDC has never performed safety studies on any of the combinations of vaccines it recommends on its CDC Child and Adolescent Immunization Schedule.

In practice, except for the hepatitis B vaccine recommended in the first 24 hours of life, infants rarely receive a single vaccine. Most are administered in combination with other vaccines.

A two-month-old infant adhering to the CDC’s childhood immunization schedule will receive eight recommended vaccines at one time, in combination. The infant will receive an additional seven doses when four months old, and could receive eight vaccine doses again when six months old.

“Each additional vaccine more than doubles the number of diseases detected in the study,” said CHD Chief Scientific Officer Brian Hooker. “The article presents evidence of the risks that should be considered in personal and medical decision-making.”

The study looked at over 1.5 million infant vaccine combinations. The authors revealed that a total of 45 different diseases were diagnosed within the first 30 days after vaccination, including infection and developmental delays.

Respiratory disease was the most recurring condition, with acute and chronic bronchitis presenting as an elevated risk in five different vaccine combinations.

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Author: HP McLovincraft

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