Vaccines contraindicated in Thymectomized People
**Also for anyone who wonders about VAX shedding**
Please put aside for a moment that ALL vaccines are unsafe, all of them kill.
Medical literature shows people who are immunocompromised or had their thymus removed aren’t supposed to receive a list of vaccines (see list below).
How will they ever know to avoid them when no one is told their thymus was taken from them?
Live-attenuated vaccines are contraindicated with thymectomy (immunocompromized)
Live vaccines use a weakened (or attenuated) form of the germ that causes a disease. They contain a small amount of the weakened live virus
Live vaccines are:
Immunocompromised persons should not receive influenza vaccine.
Administering live vaccines results in a potential risk of a greater replication and/or invasive infections with the vaccine micro-organism. This can result in vaccine-related complications, persistence of the micro-organism in the patient and/or unwanted transmission. Examples include the oral polio vaccine (no longer used in Belgium), the measles vaccine and the yellow fever vaccine.
Yellow Fever Vaccine
“Two unique risks related to vaccination are known, viscerotropic disease (YEL-AVD) and neurotropic disease (YEL- AND). These are in some cases fatal.”
“YEL-AVD is a recognised adverse reaction that resembles severe yellow fever infection. The global reporting rate is around 1 case in every 1 million people vaccinated, with thymus disease, immunosuppression, and an age of 60 years and older increasing the risk. Another serious risk of vaccination is vaccine-associated neurotropic disease (YEL-AND), which can occur at a similar rate and with the same risk factors. YEL-AND can present with a variety of neurological manifestations.
Patients who had previously had their thymus removed for any reason, including those who had their thymus removed incidentally during cardiac surgery, should not receive the vaccine.”
You may have seen signs on the door entering an ICU, Cancer ward or surgical ward, saying no one who has recently been vaccinated can enter…
Exposure to someone else who had a vaccine can be dangerous also due to SHEDDING
Live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) should not be given to individuals who live in a household with an immunocompromised patient. If administered, contact between the immunocompromised patient and household member should be avoided for 7 days.
Oral polio vaccine (OPV) should not be administered (AT ALL) to individuals who live in a household with immunocompromised patients.
Highly immunocompromised patients should avoid handling diapers of infants who have been vaccinated with rotavirus vaccine for 4 weeks after vaccination.
Immunocompromised patients should avoid contact with persons who develop skin lesions after receipt VAR or ZOS until the lesions clear.
Yes and this doesn't take into account the toxic additives and impurities that come with vaccines.
Sharing with a nurse group.