CDC pushes Covid, flu, and RSV shots without routine risk warnings


The CDC is still pushing Covid vaccines to all elderly regardless of their individual risk, immunity status, or preexisting conditions that could make them vulnerable to vaccine side effects. No warnings or cautions are being routinely issued to make patients aware of risks and to ensure they give informed consent.

The CDC is also pushing RSV vaccine and flu shots, with no long term studies on the potential side effects of getting the combination of vaccines and without routine disclosure of serious side effects.

It’s hard to square the vaccine marketing role the CDC has taken on with the tenets of “informed consent,” which require that patients receive full disclosure about risks prior to getting a medical treatment.

Read about some of the Covid vaccine side effects: https://sharylattkisson.com/2024/06/exclusive-summary-covid-19-vaccine-concerns/

According to the CDC: 35% of adults have received flu vaccines so far this season. The CDC does not disclose that federal studies indicate flu shots are generally ineffective and have resulted in greater mortality without measurable benefit.

Read more on the ineffectiveness of flu shots and higher death rate: https://web.archive.org/web/20220509015144/https://sharylattkisson.com/2015/09/govt-researchers-flu-shots-not-effective-in-elderly-after-all/

The CDC says 18% of adults have gotten Covid 19 vaccines for this season.

Coverage is greater at nursing homes where the shots are aggressively marketed to the population and about 30% have gotten this season’s Covid vaccine. Also 58% of nursing home residents have gotten a flu shot.

Read more on how Covid vaccines can be risky for the “frail elderly”: https://sharylattkisson.com/2021/05/deaths-of-elderly-who-recovered-from-covid-19-but-died-after-vaccine-raise-questions/

And 40% of adults over age 75 at “increased risk” for severe respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) have gotten that vaccine.

Read more about RSV vaccine safety concerns: https://sharylattkisson.com/2023/03/fda-gives-green-light-to-pfizers-rsv-vaccine-despite-concerns-over-phase-3-data/

More from CDC below:


COVID-19, RSV, and flu vaccinations remain low for adults, but there is still time to get vaccinated for respiratory virus season 

  • Among U.S. adults 18 and older, an estimated 35% have received flu vaccines, and nearly 18% have received COVID-19 vaccines for the 2024Å¡C25 respiratory virus season. An estimated 40% of adults aged 75 and older and more than 31% of adults aged 60Å¡C74 at increased risk for severe respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease have received the recommended one-time dose of RSV vaccine. According to a CDC survey, many of the unvaccinated adults reported they intend to get vaccinated. 
  • Influenza virus, SARS-CoV-2, and RSV can cause serious illness, particularly for adults aged 65 and older, people with certain medical conditions, and people from some racial and ethnic minority populations. These viruses typically circulate in the United States each year during the fall through early spring. Investigators analyzed data from a survey that included questions about receipt of COVID-19, flu, and RSV vaccines, vaccination intent, behavioral and social drivers of vaccination, and sociodemographic characteristics.
  • There is still time to increase vaccination coverage for the current respiratory virus season. Health care providers and immunization programs can prepare for the height of the season by expanding outreach and promoting vaccination activities. 
  • CDC experts analyze and track data to determine vaccination coverage for COVID, flu, and RSV, which helps inform vaccination outreach efforts. 
Coverage with Influenza, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, and COVID-19 Vaccines Among Nursing Home Residents ¡ª National Healthcare Safety Network, United States, November 2024


Low vaccination coverage against COVID-19, flu, and RSV in nursing homes must be improved to protect residents from severe outcomes

  • As of November 10, 2024, about 3 in 10 (30%) nursing home residents received a 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine. Among residents at facilities that elected to report, more than half (58%) of residents received a flu vaccine and about one in six (18%) received a respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine. Compared with vaccination coverage among nursing home residents this time last respiratory virus season, this ongoing 2024-25 season¡¯s COVID-19 vaccination (30% vs 24%) and flu vaccination coverage is lower (58% vs. 68%) than the prior respiratory virus season. Coverage with a one-time RSV vaccination increased from 7% at this time last year to 18% this season.
  • Nursing home residents are at risk of becoming infected with and getting very sick from flu, RSV, and COVID-19. Vaccination reduces the risk of severe illness and hospitalization from these vaccine-preventable diseases. Addressing low vaccination coverage is a priority to protect nursing home residents during the ongoing 2024Å¡C25 respiratory virus season. Investigators analyzed National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) vaccination data from U.S. nursing homes to assess current flu, RSV, and COVID-19 vaccination coverage among nursing home residents during the ongoing 2024-25 respiratory virus season.
  • Nursing home leadership and health care personnel should provide recommended vaccines to residents and are encouraged to talk to residents and their loved ones about the effectiveness, safety, and benefits of vaccination. Coverage with all three vaccines was highest in small nursing homes, suggesting that leadership and other staff might be able to build trust with residents and families and reduce barriers to vaccination.
  • CDC experts manage NHSN, which monitors patient safety and collects and disseminates critical public health data to inform public health decisions. More than 38,000 U.S. health care facilities, including nearly all U.S. nursing homes, are enrolled in NHSN.

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4 thoughts on “CDC pushes Covid, flu, and RSV shots without routine risk warnings”

  1. This has got to stop. This country has lost it’s way. When I got a business degree, a class called business ethics was a required course. Webster defines ethics as: ‘A set of moral principles.’ That has been thrown out the window. Hopefully RFKjr can dismantle the Pharmaceutical Industrial complex.

  2. I have been ill with coronavirus at least 5 times. I got sick for the
    first time in 2 days. I got sick: I was at a reception with the deputy
    heads.the doctor of the 33rd polyclinic in Almetyevsk, he looked at me
    and said that I looked sick and sent me home . By the evening, he became
    ill and had symptoms of coughing, sneezing, runny nose, fever and pain in
    his head and muscles.I was ill at home on the first day of my illness. On
    the second day, when the symptoms subsided, PCR was performed in the
    polyclinic, whether he was ill or not, he was not ill on a more accurate
    device. By evening, all the symptoms had gone away. The next day after I
    recovered, a nurse came to me as a coronavirus patient. At first she
    communicated with me in a mask, then she realized that I was not ill and
    continued her communication without a mask. The fact that I got sick with
    coronavirus the next day, the day after my recovery, my mother fell ill
    with the same symptoms but also with loss of sense of smell. Then why did
    I undergo an in-depth medical examination in the direction of the
    polyclinic? The analysis for antibodies to coronavirus showed a value of
    240 BAU/ml. The analysis was made in November 2023, 1.5 years after the
    re-vaccination. I got over the other 4 times asymptomatically through an
    antibody test. He was ill asymptomatically due to his memory cells. To
    verify my words, I can send photos of 7 immunograms, 3 immunologist
    consultations and an analysis for antibodies to coronavirus made 1.5
    years after re-vaccination

  3. It would be difficult to identify an entity that has lost more credibility and lost it faster than the CDC. Advice from the CDC is about as valuable as dieting tips from Stacey Abrams or etiquette lessons from Rosie O’Donnell.

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