Stunning: 44% of Pregnant Women Lost Their Babies in Pfizer Trial
So What Did Become of those 238 "Outcome Pending" Since March 2021?
How many pregnant women lost their babies in the Pfizer-BionTech trial? Around 44%, according to Naomi Wolf.
I have been been following this story since the beginning regarding what happened in the Pfizer trial in regards to pregnant women. There’s been a lot of disparate viewpoints that I think people have clicked on without putting the big picture together of what this means. I want to try and reconcile that.
My apologies if my numbers are ballpark here, but here is the story to try to put these pieces together. In the Pfizer Biontech Covid vaccine trials, a little over 41000 people were enrolled. Got it. They skewed younger and healthier than the population most at risk for Covid, and they excluded many subgroups who would later be pushed to get the vaccine. Got it. Among the groups excluded from the original trials were women who were pregnant or who were trying to become pregnant. Also got it.
As life would have it, a small subset of this group: 271, to be exact, became pregnant anyways, becoming unwitting lab rats for the greatest experiment in history to follow. Unsurprisingly, since the study only ran until March of 2021 maybe 6 or 7 months after it commenced, a pretty small percentage of these women had actually completed their pregnancy, which generally is the result of a live, hopefully healthy birth, a stillbirth, a miscarriage, or a fetal death. In theory when the Pfizer trials started none of them were pregnant. I got it
This fueled disparate headlines on both sides. On one side Pfizer claimed that the miscarriage rate was in line with a normal rate and used it to justify pushing the jabs on pregnant women the world over. The miscarriage rate in the trial was only slightly elevated from normal rates, if you assumed that every single outcome pending pregnancy had a baby that lived and was well afterwards. That’s pretty generous in an ongoing trial.
On the other side the Expose ran a piece claiming that all but one of the babies to Covid vaccinated mothers in the Pfizer trial died. This was also true at the time of study conclusion. The difference was that they assumed that every baby in the outcome pending group didn’t exist at best and died at worst. Well, we didn’t know that. What did become of those 238 outcome pending pregnancies on which the decision to vaccinate millions of pregnant women the world over were based on?
The Pfizer trial documents ran through March of 2021. Anyone who knows a bit about pregnancy can logically conclude that these 238 women are no longer pregnant with that baby. The kid has already been born or died and who knows what their long term future is. One might think that those 238 pregnancies would be really important in recommending a vaccine to millions of women worldwide. I could only assume that Pfizer was hiding the outcomes because they knew it was bad.
So out comes Naomi Wolf with this shocking conclusion: the miscarriage rate after Pfizer jab is 44%, well far above the usual baseline by at least three times. This is insane.
I have had a miscarriage. In early 2009 I was what could best be called a health nut. I was running on the beach every morning in training for a marathon. I barely drank alcohol (really more than one glass of red wine got to me during the next morning training. So drinking at all was limited to maybe close to a bottle the night before off days). I wasn’t smoking and was into all kinds of health nut things: Kangen (alkalizing) water, and intermittent fasting, and gluten free diets, and colon cleansing and liver flushes and kidney tea. Organic GMO whole foods was usually bought ironically at Whole Foods. Some wheat grass in the morning, some steel cut oatmeal at night, but maybe with some goat cheese because I need protein right? I’ve been there honey.
My period was late and I took a pregnancy test. It was negative. I started a strange period of spotting and negative pregnancy tests and running and started assuming that maybe the workouts were causing amenorrhea because of my overexerting myself. Four weeks later I took a pregnancy test that came up with the faintest second bar positive. I wanted to get this checked out immediately.
Doctors couldn’t find the baby on ultrasound, but I was pregnant on pee test, so they thought the baby might be ectopic. My HCG levels were levelled off two days later. I felt fine even though I would be over six weeks pregnant by then. At UCLA medical center they found the baby, in my uterus, healthy and fine and normal they said. He or she was 6 weeks 5 days along.
I continued running, I just didn’t press myself and walked a lot more. I never really felt pregnant. I mean I ate a lot of food but I was working out too. I had taken seven pregnancy home tests over the course of four weeks to come up with a slight positive. I began bleeding around 11 weeks. They told me the baby had died around 6 weeks and 5 days. They thought it was a chromasonal defect, which basically means that there was a problem that meant the pregnancy could not continue beyond an early stage. There was a fatal flaw in the blueprint, if you will. Doctors said it happened in about 1 in 6 pregnancies and almost all of which spontaneously miscarried in the first trimester. I was saddened but never devastated by the loss because many things felt wrong there.
See the thing I always heard is that once you got to the second and third trimester, if scans all showed no problem, you were statistically out of the danger zone for miscarriage. It could still happen it was just so much less likely.
So what do think is going on here?
They aren’t following outcomes, and now they don’t even have to do clinical trials. Insanity.
Might want to take a second look at that number.
https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/fact-checking-the-claim-that-44-of?utm_source=%2Fprofile%2F45856071-ne-nakedemperorsubstackcom&utm_medium=reader2