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Covid Booster Shot Efficacy Becomes Negative After One Month — New Study

A negative efficacy rate means that the boosted get infected more than the non-boosted.

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This article originally appeared on Infowars and was republished with permission.

Guest post by Sean Miller

A recent preprint study documented how the effectiveness of the Covid booster shots is not just non-existent, but negative, leading to boosted individuals having higher rates of Covid infection.

The researchers analyzed data from healthcare workers in the country of Georgia during the Omicron variant circulation between January to June 2022. The data demonstrated that in the first month after boosting, there was an effective result from the shot, but in the second and third months, that effectiveness went negative. In the fourth month that negative effectiveness rate got dramatically worse.

“Absolute VE [vaccine effectiveness] for a first booster was 40% (95% Confidence Interval (CI) -56 – 77) at 7– 29 days following vaccination, -9% (95% CI -104 – 42) at 30 – 59 days, and – 46% (95% CI -156 – 17) at ≥ 60 days,” the study said in the ‘Results’ section.

Notably, the Covid vaccines (viral vector and mRNA) make the vaccinated produce the spike protein of Covid, so testing positive for Covid after becoming a spike protein factory may come as no surprise.

In addition to a negative efficacy after repeated doses, the Covid vaccine is also documented to increase in lethality after repeated doses and increase Covid infection rates after repeated doses.

The Covid shots are known to:

In the U.S. the CDC recommends that all Americans receive their tenth Covid shot and that young children receive extra, while Canada recommends another Covid shot for the pregnant, indigenous, ‘racialized’ & ‘equity-deserving’.

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