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Duchess's avatar

Thank you for bringing what is very unpleasant information.

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CK's avatar

First of all, thank you so very much Dr. McCullough and Mr. Leake for all of these articles that raise such important points. I am particularly grateful that you provide the links to the articles you discuss, which have all been open source to date. I read every article you publish, and often read many of the supporting research articles, in order to best inform myself to share the truth with family and friends.

I have a question regarding this article. The authors' conclusions regarding their findings are resoundingly positive in favour of the vaccines over what they characterize as a "small" risk of relapse. Here is a quote that stood out to me:

"Despite this higher relative risk, the absolute increase in the risk of relapse remained low, and the majority of patients who experienced a vaccine-associated relapse did not require a change in immunosuppression. Our findings indicate that patients with glomerular disease should be monitored more closely after a second or third COVID-19 vaccine but that the established benefits of vaccination in this vulnerable population likely outweigh the small absolute increase in risk of disease relapse."

I have a PhD and a background in research in the Social Sciences but am not a medical doctor or researcher. I am unable to interpret the gap between the positive conclusions of the authors of the study and Dr. McCullough's concern about these findings. I am wondering if Dr. McCullough is able to explain this, if he has time? Thanks very much!

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