71 min read
25 Aug
25Aug

A video is going around but also being removed from social media we got our hand on the video before it got removed 



(DURING TO A SAFETY REASONS THIS POST HAVE BEEN LOCKED 🔒 AND UNDER OUR DEPARTMENT GROUND/THIS POST IS DISABLED 🔒)


See the video on Instagram


Video also was uploaded today informing people about the Covid vaccine 💉 shot




No evidence that COVID-19 vaccines cause more severe disease; antibody-dependent enhancement has not been observed in clinical trials

CLAIM
COVID-19 vaccines will cause more severe disease through antibody-dependent enhancement 
VERDICT 
DETAILS
Unsupported: Antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) is theoretically a possible side effect of a COVID-19 vaccine. However, clinical trials so far have not shown ADE occurring in vaccinated participants.
Inaccurate: Some posts inaccurately suggest that non-neutralizing antibodies are irrelevant to protection. Although non-neutralizing antibodies can result in ADE, such antibodies can also participate in a process called antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity, which kills infected cells and is an important part of a protective immune response. 
KEY TAKE AWAY
Antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) occurs when antibodies are unable to neutralize a virus’ infectivity, but instead enhance a virus’ ability to infect cells. Although ADE has been observed in humans who received the dengue vaccine, as well as in individuals that received a vaccine candidate for the respiratory syncytial virus, the evidence from COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials so far have not shown more severe disease occurring in vaccinated participants. People who have been given the COVID-19 vaccine will continue to be closely monitored to determine whether ADE occurs. 

FULL CLAIM: “We will likely be warned of a new, more deadly “strain” of the virus, shortly after the vaccine is widely distributed, which will justify further lockdowns. It’s called antibody-dependent enhancement”; “Is no one concerned about the potential for disease enhancement and turning this current virus into a very real problem for the masses who are not currently at risk?” 

SUMMARY 


A Facebook post claiming that the COVID-19 vaccine will lead to more severe disease, was published in November 2020 and went viral on the social media platform. Similar claims have also been published in other social media posts, like this one and this one. The claim is based on the observation of more severe disease occurring in individuals who received a dengue vaccine and a vaccine candidate for the respiratory syncytial virus. Both are likely due to a phenomenon known as antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE), however ADE has not been shown to occur in individuals that received COVID-19 vaccines to date. One of the authors of these posts previously claimed to be a toxicologist, despite lacking the necessary training and credentials for that title.

Health Feedback reached out to experts to find out how ADE works and whether the claim is supported by scientific evidence [See scientists’ feedback in full].

Angeline Rouers, a research fellow at the Singapore Immunology Network, explained, “ADE is a well-known mechanism which was described for the first time in dengue patients. It occurs when antibodies do not neutralize the virus to prevent its entry into the target cells, for example, but instead facilitate the infection of other cells, such as macrophages(a type of immune cell).” However, Rouers added that there is “no clear evidence” showing that the virus which causes COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, can infect macrophages.

Walter Orenstein, a professor at Emory University’s School of Medicine and associate director of the Emory Vaccine Center, said, “Vaccine-enhanced disease is theoretically possible with SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, but it has not been seen as of yet in the clinical trials reported.”

Sanjay Mishra, a staff scientist and project coordinator at Vanderbilt University Medical Center who is also working in the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium, concurred. “The major vaccine candidates that have so far progressed in the large-scale Phase 3 trials, such as the ones by Moderna, Pfizer, and AstraZeneca, have all ruled out any serious safety concerns,” he said.

Overall, all three scientists agreed that close monitoring of vaccinated people is important to ensure that ADE can be safely ruled out as a side effect of COVID-19 vaccines, but for the moment, the evidence has not shown the vaccines to have such an effect.

Indeed, preliminary findings released by frontrunners ModernaPfizer, and AstraZenecahave shown that among the trial participants who did develop COVID-19, those who received the vaccine did not show higher rates of severe disease compared to those who received the placebo. The vaccines were also able to prevent COVID-19 at a high efficacy. However, an important caveat of these findings is that these trials are still underway, and the number of people included in these interim analyses is relatively small.

Apart from the post’s unsupported claim linking ADE with COVID-19 vaccines, its suggestion that non-neutralizing antibodies are always ineffective for protection is inaccurate. The immune system has several ways to deal with viruses, and “Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, which can involve non-neutralizing antibodies, is another mechanism that is distinct from neutralization, that is also important for a protective immune response,” Rouers pointed out.

And contradicting Everly’s claim that “no one is concerned about it,” Health Feedback was able to find multiple articles published over the course of 2020 that discussed concerns about ADE with respect to the COVID-19 vaccine. Some examples are this article in The Scientistthis article in PNAS and these twoarticles in Nature[1,2], the latter two being highly respected journals in the scientific community.

Overall, while ADE is a theoretical possibility with a COVID-19 vaccine, clinical trials in people so far have not shown that participants who received the vaccine have a higher rate of severe illness compared to participants who did not receive the vaccine. Given the paramount importance of vaccine safety, scientists continue to encourage rigorous safety monitoring so as to completely rule out ADE as a potential side effect.

SCIENTISTS’ FEEDBACK 


Sanjay Mishra, Staff Scientist, Vanderbilt University Medical Center:
Antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) of virus infection[3] is a phenomenon in which virus-specific antibodies enhance the entry of a virus and in some cases, ADE can even facilitate the infection[4]. ADE has been well-established in dengue[5] and Zika viruses, and any poor-quality antibodies that bind the virus but do not neutralize can cause ADE. Indeed, some vaccine candidates, such as one against the respiratory syncytial virus resulted in deaths due to ADE[6]. However, no definitive role for ADE in human coronavirus diseases has yet been established, despite the concerns raised[7,8].

The opinion piece being cited in the viral Facebook post itself concluded that “the risk of ADE remains theoretical” in vaccines being developed against SARS-CoV-2. The major vaccine candidates that have so far progressed in the large-scale Phase 3 trials, such as the ones by Moderna, Pfizer, and AstraZeneca, have all ruled out any serious safety concerns. While more data is still needed, randomized controlled trial with convalescent sera has also shown to be beneficial in COVID-19 patients with moderate disease severity[9]. Just like other things related to this pandemic, we should wait and watch for better evidence to completely rule out ADE, but no evidence for ADE has been found so far.

Angéline Rouers, Research Fellow, Singapore Immunology Network:
ADE is a well-known mechanism which was described for the first time in dengue patients. It occurs when antibodies do not neutralize the virus (to prevent its entry into the target cells, for example) but instead facilitate the infection of other cells, such as macrophages. It might also happen with coronaviruses but for the moment, there is only in vitro demonstration of this with regards to SARS-CoV-2. The mechanisms in vivo might be different and there is also no clear evidence showing that SARS-CoV-2 can infect macrophages.

As a note, it is false to say that non-neutralizing antibodies are inevitably non-efficient and potentially dangerous, as suggested in the Facebook post. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, which can involve non-neutralizing antibodies, is another mechanism that is distinct from neutralization that is also important for a protective immune response.

This claim is particularly alarming for the public and unnecessarily invokes a conspiracy theory: “Most people don’t know this. Most people have never heard of this. Maybe the big media networks don’t find this important to share with the public, or maybe it’s just plain censorship. It’s probably censorship.” In fact, ADE is an immune response that is well-known to scientists and is described in immunology textbooks. ADE has to be assessed from the earliest stage of vaccine development. There is nothing hidden from the public—if ADE is detected during vaccine development, it will simply stop the trials. We can never be 100% sure it will not happen in some way at a later stage of clinical trials, but in the whole history of vaccines, this phenomenon is very rare.

The post also mentions that (a) antibodies might not be the most protective aspect in the context of SARS-CoV-2 and (b) there is a positive correlation between severity and level of antibodies in the patients. These claims are true but require more context to avoid readers’ misunderstanding. (a) Cytotoxic T cells have indeed been shown to be very important to fight the virus, however, antibodies are also doing part of the job and should not be neglected. (b) The level of antibodies is not necessarily predictive of their efficiency. Indeed, a high level (quantity) of antibodies might not be protective, and can even make things worse in the case of ADE. But a high level of efficient (i.e. neutralizing) antibodies is generally a good prognosis.

Overall, it is very important to keep in mind the difference between what is observed in the patients and what a vaccine aims to do. A vaccine does not aim to reproduce the immune response observed in an infected patient; on the contrary, it aims to elicit a neutralizing antibody response to fight the virus—this is something that is rarely observed in severely ill patients.

ADE is a concern that scientists have in mind and will assess carefully. Some vaccine candidates may have led to ADE at the early stages of trials, which halted their development. This demonstrates that the scientific community is careful and will do everything possible to release a safe vaccine for people. In conclusion, ADE is a theoretical danger in SARS-CoV-2 vaccine development, but it is taken seriously into consideration and very close monitoring will be applied.

Walter A. Orenstein, Professor, Emory University School of Medicine:
Thus far, there are no data supporting vaccination as a cause of vaccine-induced enhanced disease. Such enhancement has been seen with other vaccines such as the dengue vaccine. But for the vast majority of vaccines in use today around the world, such enhancement has not been seen.

There were concerns seen in animal studies with earlier coronavirus vaccines for SARS-CoV-1 and MERS. But not in human studies to date.

Vaccine-enhanced disease is theoretically possible with SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, but it has not been seen as of yet in the clinical trials reported. In contrast, SARS-CoV-2 is killing more than 1000 people a day in the US alone.

It will be important to monitor to see if enhanced disease happens. But there is no evidence for it in humans to date. In contrast, there is good information on efficacy.

REFERENCES


Fact Check: Man Touted By Others As 'Ph.D., Oxford' Did NOT Make True Statements About COVID-19 Vaccines To A School Board -- Did NOT Attend Oxford University

Fact Check

  •   
  •  by: Alexis Tereszcuk
Fact Check: Man Touted By Others As 'Ph.D., Oxford' Did NOT Make True Statements About COVID-19 Vaccines To A School Board -- Did NOT Attend Oxford UniversityNot True 

Does a doctor share evidence of vaccine harm to an Ohio school board? No, that's not true: A man who appeared at a school board meeting in Ohio repeated multiple COVID-19 vaccine conspiracy theories that Lead Stories has previously debunked as false with documented evidence from scientific studies. Social media users picked up on the man introducing himself as a "Ph.D., Oxford" to imply he has a connection with the prestigious University of Oxford in England when, in fact, he was identifying himself as being from Oxford, Ohio, after stating he held a Ph.D.

The claims appeared as a video (archived here) where it was published on Facebook on August 21, 2021. It opened:

What did he say about the vaccine?!

This is what the post looked like on Facebook at the time of writing:

Facebook screenshot

(Source: Facebook screenshot taken on Mon Aug 23 21:11:30 2021 UTC)

The man spoke on August 16, 2021, at the Talawanda School District Board of Education meeting, according to a video posted on YouTube.

He identified himself as, "Dr. Sean Brooks, Phd, Oxford" which is how many speakers identified themselves, name and then town. Talawanda School District is in Oxford, Ohio, and it appears he was identifying where he was from, not that he attended the University of Oxford in the UK or was a doctor there. Multiple people in the YouTube video identify themselves as from Oxford as well, as they spoke to the school board. Social media users incorrectly identified him as an doctor with a Ph.D. from Oxford, but that is a misinterpretation of him identifying himself.

He claimed he has "48 publications including 23 books." A search on Amazon.com turns up a list of books with the author "Sean M. Brooks, Ph.D." with his latest book titled, "The Unmasking of American Schools: The Sanctioned Abuse of America's Teachers and Students," and a previous book, " Purposeful Deception: The Inside Plan to Communize and Destroy American K-12 Education."

Miami University in Oxford, Ohio had a link for Dr. Sean Brooks but that page no longer exists. A Dr. Sean Brooks appeared on the Quite Frankly podcast in 2020 and a video posted to Bitchute.com titled, "THE WAR BEHIND SUPER TUESDAY" FT. DR. SEAN BROOKS PH.D 3/4/20." He appears to be the same man from the video at the school board meeting. At 2:20 in the video on Bitchute the host says, "Dr. Sean Brooks, Ph.D. has spent his career in education." He is not identified as a medical doctor. He is further identified as a graduate of Miami University of Ohio, which is in Oxford, Ohio, and as having a Ph.D. from Walden University, which is an online school.

Here is a breakdown of the false claims regarding COVID-19 vaccines that he makes in the video:

Claim: "Dr. Robert Malone, who created the messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine has said no one should ever take these jabs ...

Malone has become an outspoken critic of the COVID-19 vaccines. His credentials are in question as are the validity of his vaccine claims. Malone's supporters claim (archived here) that he was intellectually "raped" at the Salk Institute and not given the proper credit for his invention of the mRNA vaccine technology. But the Virginia-based M.D./pharmaceutical expert's claim that he invented mRNA vaccine technology is not recognized by independent authors writing about development of the ground-breaking method of immunization. Lead Stories has debunked claims based on Malone's claims herehere and here.

Claim: "The people who have taken it [the vaccine] are going to die in the next six months to 3 to 5 years."

There is NO evidence that the first wave of people who got the vaccine early in 2021 died en masse six months after getting the shots. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 201,425,785 people had received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine in the United States as of August 23, 2021 and 170,821,621 were fully vaccinated. If those who are "going to die in the next six months to three to five years," were going to start dying there would be huge numbers of people who died already. There have not been. Meanwhile, there have been 623,244 people who have died in the United States from COVID-19 as of August 18, 2021 according to the CDC.

Claim: By taking the COVID-19 vaccine, "you've dramatically decreased your own immune system by 35%. The first jab did it by at least 15, the second did it by 35."

Lead Stories previously debunked the claim that the COVID-19 vaccine wipes out the body's natural antibodies here. The COVID-19 vaccine does NOT decrease your own immune system.

Dr. Otto Yang, a UCLA researcher whose specialty is infectious disease, explained over the phone to Lead Stories on May 26, 2021, that the COVID-19 vaccine does not destroy the body's pre-existing antibodies:

There is no issue with overriding or changing or looking different. From the standpoint of the immune system, it is exactly the same thing. Our immune system is evolved to deal with numerous infections in our lifetime. If every time you got a new infection you wiped out everything you had before, your immune system wouldn't work. And we know that isn't the case. It's not like you get the flu and then you're susceptible to getting measles. There is no reason that you can't make antibodies against multiple things over time. That makes no sense."

Claim: "Eighty percent of the women who have been jabbed have lost their children in the first trimester."

This is not true. The "pregnancy loss among participants with a completed pregnancy" in the V-safe Pregnancy Registry was 104 spontaneous abortions at less than 20 weeks out of 827 completed pregnancies, which would be a 12.6% miscarriage rate. The 82% rate was falsely claimed and debunked by Lead Stories here.

The CDC has a page on its website that states there is no evidence the COVID-19 vaccine causes any problems with pregnancy:

Is it safe for me to get a COVID-19 vaccine if I would like to have a baby one day?

Yes. If you are trying to become pregnant now or want to get pregnant in the future, you may get a COVID-19 vaccine when one is available to you.
There is currently no evidence that COVID-19 vaccination causes any problems with pregnancy, including the development of the placenta. In addition, there is no evidence that female or male fertility problems are a side effect of any vaccine, including COVID-19 vaccines."

Claim: If you've had a COVID-19 vaccine, "You can no longer breastfeed, donate blood, donate organs, donate blood plasma nor bone marrow. If you don't believe me try to donate blood and blood plasma and find out what happens. You will be denied."

This claim is not true as Lead Stories reported here:

The American Red Cross is accepting donated plasma from people who have had the vaccine and otherwise qualify to donate. Lead Stories previously debunked the claim that you cannot donate plasma if you've had the vaccine here.

Claim: "The jabs create spike proteins. They're in the jabs themselves."

Lead Stories previously debunked this claim in a story here.

The CDC says the mRNA technology used in COVID-19 vaccines is not gene therapy, since it is not designed to alter or revise the genome of patients. The vaccines use genetic material, "messenger RNA," to induce the body to make the spike proteins found on SARS-CoV-2, training the immune system to recognize the spikes on SARS-CoV-2 and attack it, but the delivery mechanism does not penetrate the nucleus of cells, where a person's genome is found.


Video clip of Ohio school board meeting spreads vaccine falsehoods

yesterday

A 4-minute video clip of a man sharing several misleading claims about COVID-19 vaccines during a school board meeting in Ohio is making the rounds online. At the Talawanda School District meeting on Aug. 16, Sean Brooks introduced himself as a doctor who has a Ph.D. According to his website, it is in education rather than science. The video of his comments was shared widely on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and TikTok. One clip on TikTok received more than 2 million likes. Brooks did not return a request for comment. 

Here are some of his key claims and the facts.

___

CLAIM: Dr. Robert Malone, who created the messenger RNA vaccine, has said no one should ever take these jabs

THE FACTS: While Malone has publicly criticized COVID-19 vaccines and claims to have invented the idea of mRNA vaccine technology, he was not involved in the development of COVID-19 vaccines.

“I did not develop mRNA COVID vaccines and I never was involved in developing a human mRNA vaccine,” Malone told The Associated Press.

Malone further clarified in an email that he never said that the COVID-19 vaccines should not be administered.

In fact, multiple scientists contributed to the development of mRNA vaccine technology over many years. The messenger RNA, also known as mRNA, vaccines work by delivering a piece of genetic code from the spike protein of the coronavirus to train the immune system to react. 

The AP has reported on the two different streams of research -- neither of which involved Malone -- that led to the Pfizer and Moderna mRNA vaccines against COVID-19.

___

CLAIM: People who have been vaccinated are going to die in the next six months to three to five years.

THE FACTS: No evidence can be found to back up this prophecy. Data from millions of people who have been vaccinated shows COVID-19 vaccines do not cause death, but rather prevent it. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave full approval to Pfizer for its messenger RNA COVID-19 vaccine on Monday. The FDA had previously granted Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson emergency use authorization for their COVID-19 vaccines based on safety data that tracked more than 70,000 people through clinical trials. For emergency use authorization approval, trial participants are followed up two months after their last dose. 

The FDA reviews six months of safety data before granting full approval. “The safety data now exists for a full year and in some cases 18 months,” said Dr. Matthew Woodruff, an immunologist at Emory University. “We have seen over and over again no indications that the immune responses to these vaccines are functionally different to immune responses from other vaccines.”

___

CLAIM: People who have been vaccinated have decreased their own immune system by 35 percent. That means if they take a booster shot, including a flu shot in the future, they will die.

THE FACTS: COVID-19 vaccines do not decrease immune response. In fact, the vaccines boost the body’s ability to mount an immune reaction against COVID-19, which is why health officials are encouraging those who have already had the virus to get the vaccine. Brooks’ claim about the flu shot is easily refuted with data. Flu shots were available last winter, just as people began receiving COVID-19 shots, and deaths were not reported. Nor has there been any data indicating negative health effects for people who receive a flu shot after a COVID-19 vaccine. The CDC has recommended getting the flu shot throughout the ongoing pandemic even after COVID-19 vaccines began being administered. 

___

CLAIM: COVID-19 vaccines will prompt the body into a process known as “antibody dependent enhancement” which will lead to cytokine storms and death.

THE FACTS: Studies have shown COVID-19 vaccines do not cause antibody dependent enhancement. The phenomenon occurs when antibodies wind up helping a virus rather than destroy it. On some rare occasions, antibody dependent enhancement has occurred following certain vaccines, such as the dengue virus vaccine. Dr. Arnold Monto, a University of Michigan disease specialist, previously told the AP the phenomenon of antibody dependent enhancement “hasn’t been seen” with COVID-19 vaccines.

Brooks’ claims about cytokine storms, a kind of inflammatory immune reaction, are also false. Cytokine storms are associated with COVID-19 infections but have not been recorded as a reaction to the available vaccines.

____

CLAIM: The vaccine will sterilize children permanently, and 80 percent of women who have been jabbed have lost their children in the first trimester. 

THE FACTS: Medical professionals agree that COVID-19 vaccines do not affect fertility, do not cause sterilization and are safe for pregnant people. A Pfizer study found that just as many women who were given the vaccine became pregnant as those who received placebo shots. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is encouraging pregnant women to receive the vaccine, particularly since pregnant women are at elevated risk for severe disease if they contract coronavirus. 

Additionally, Brooks’ comment that 80 percent of women miscarried is not backed up by any evidence and is contradicted by data. A CDC analysis found that 2,500 women who recieved a dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine before 20 weeks of pregnancy showed no increased risk of miscarriage. 

___

CLAIM: People who are vaccinated are not allowed to donate blood and blood plasma.

THE FACTS: Blood centers are accepting blood from people who have received the COVID-19 vaccines and are encouraging vaccinated individuals to give blood. The American Red Cross has said that as long as individuals are symptom free and feeling well at the time of donation, they can donate blood after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine. 

The American Association of Blood Banks has also said that the U.S.Food and Drug Administration’s blood donation eligibility criteria allow people who have received vaccines authorized in the U.S. to give blood. 

__

This is part of AP’s effort to address widely shared misinformation, including work with outside companies and organizations to add factual context to misleading content that is circulating online. Learn more about fact-checking at AP.

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