
VAERS U.S. COVID-19 Vaccine Data
Today, we will share U.S. COVID-19 vaccine data from the VAERS database. Recently, we shared data from the Public Health Agency of Canada, which shows higher COVID-19 deaths among those who were vaccinated for COVID-19, with death rates proportional to the number of boosters received.
VAERS is an acronym for the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System co-managed by the CDC and the FDA. It is a voluntary reporting system, though pharmaceutical companies are obligated to report any adverse vaccine event that they are aware of. Anyone can report a possible adverse event to the VAERS database. The CDC is responsible for verifying the cases reported.
Reported cases can be done online, and several pieces of information are required to file a vaccine event. This includes the patients:
- Date of birth and gender
- Patient’s address
- Age at the time of vaccination
- Whether the patient was pregnant at the time of the vaccination
- The name of the vaccine given
- Date and time the vaccine was given.
- Any allergies the patient has
- Names of any over-the-counter medications the patient takes
- Names of any prescription medications the patient takes.
- Any acute illness the patient was suffering from at the time of the vaccine administration
- Any chronic medical problems the patient has.
In addition, information on the person reporting the adverse event is required and includes:
- The name of the person reporting the event and relation to the patient in question, including whether the person reporting is a healthcare professional.
- Reporting person’s address.
- Name of doctor that be contacted regarding the adverse event.
- The name, type of facility, Â and address of the facility or clinic where the vaccine was administered.
- The name of the vaccine given, its lot number, the manufacturer of the vaccine, route of administration, the site of vaccine (left arm, right arm, etc)
- The type of adverse reaction, symptoms, treatment given, and outcome of the adverse event.
- The medical tests and laboratory results related to the adverse event
- Whether the patient required hospitalization and if so the name and address of the hospital and duration of hospitalization.
- Whether the patient died and the date of death
Some deny that the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are potentially dangerous and claim false claims are being filed to intentionally show the vaccines are more dangerous than they are. Â I show the above requirements to file a report to indicate how hard it would be to file a false report as most of the information required can be cross-checked with other databases. For instance, it would be easy to verify that I am a physician and my office address. Â Lot numbers can be verified and the days they would have been used and where. The name and address of the patient can easily be verified. The date and site of vaccine administration can easily be verified.
Plus this needs to be taken into account.
Here is what the VAERS reporting states. Warning: Knowingly filing a false VAERS report with the intent to mislead the Department of Health and Human Services is a violation of Federal law (18 U.S. Code § 1001) punishable by fine and imprisonment.
AÂ study from 2011Â concluded that fewer than 1% of the adverse reactions are reported to VAERS. Thus whatever VAERS shows underrepresents deaths and adverse events for all vaccines, not just COVID-19 vaccines.
Now for the U.S. COVID-19 vaccine data. The following table and graphs come from Vaersanalysis.info, You can check the website periodically and get the most recent data. The picture is worth the thousand words they say and the VAERS data verifies this.
Take some time and look at the information. When you look at the table and graphs below you will see that the COVID vaccines have been caused by more adverse events and deaths than all other vaccines COMBINED since the advent of VAERS in 1990.