Frank Bergman, SLAY
A sweeping new study is raising urgent alarms about Covid “vaccinations” after confirming that mRNA injections have triggered a surge in autoimmune disease, such as Vaccine-Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (VAIDS), in children.
The study, conducted by leading Israeli scientists, linked Covid shots to a dramatic spike in autoimmune disease in children, while demolishing the narrative that the virus itself poses the greater risk.
In what may be one of the largest pediatric autoimmune investigations to date, Dr. Cynthia Freiberg of Maccabi Healthcare Services, alongside colleagues at Tel Aviv University and Rambam Health Care Campus, analyzed medical records of nearly half a million children aged 1 to 21.
The study analyzed data from 2014 to 2022 to track the prevalence of autoimmune disorders.
Those disorders include celiac disease, vasculitis, Raynaud’s, juvenile arthritis, and even vaccine-induced AIDS (VAIDS).
The researchers sought to determine whether COVID-19 infection or “vaccination” was triggering a rise in immune dysfunction among children.
The results of the study were published in the world-renowned medical journal Pediatric Rheumatology.
The study found that, while overall autoimmune diagnoses remained steady at around 0.9%, the risk shifted dramatically when the researchers zoomed in on individual factors.
Children who tested positive for COVID-19 showed no increase in risk of developing autoimmune disease.
However, those who were “vaccinated” for Covid showed a 23% higher risk of being diagnosed with autoimmune disease during follow-up.
The researchers warn that the mRNA shot causes a child’s autoimmune disease risk to skyrocket, affecting thousands, if not millions, of young lives.
Worryingly, the scientists identified a delay that has likely caused most autoimmune cases to be blamed on factors other than the injections.
The average time from “vaccine” to autoimmune diagnosis was 8.7 months.
The delay suggests a delayed immune reaction, not an acute response, they note.
Some conditions appeared more frequently during the pandemic, most notably celiac disease and Raynaud’s phenomenon.
Meanwhile, diagnoses of juvenile arthritis declined, which researchers attributed to lowered pathogen exposure due to lockdowns and school closures.
Interestingly, the study flagged a likely undercount of serious inflammatory syndromes like MIS-C—a condition linked to both infection and vaccination—because their database didn’t include hospital admissions.
The recent surge in VAIDS among children is notable.
Long dismissed by so-called “fact-checkers” as a “conspiracy theory,” VAIDS is gaining traction among medical professionals who question the long-term immune impacts of repeated mRNA exposure.
The findings of the study also add fuel to the argument that immune dysregulation, not Covid itself, is the greater long-term threat, particularly for children.