published in Amer Heart Assoc Jnl found women whoĪvoided animal products had longer life spans, better health, less Alzheimer's etc Study of over 100,000 post menopause women followed for 18 years. “The soul is the same in all living creatures, although the body of each is different” - Hippocrates “Until he extends his circle of compassion to include all living things, man will not himself find peace” What was happening in the cattle industry) And that makes me feel good.”-Howard Lyman (who was once a 4th generation Montana cattle rancher who decided to tell everyone “No animals need to die in order for me to live. and around the world, a fact check by USA TODAY concluded the vaccine had been ruled out as a cause of death in many, while a few are still under investigation.“A man can live and be healthy without killing animals for food therefore, if he eats meat, he participates in taking animal life merely for the sake of his appetite. While media outlets have reported on a small number of deaths after COVID-19 vaccinations in the U.S. “A review of available clinical information including death certificates, autopsy, and medical records revealed no evidence that vaccination contributed to patient deaths,” the agency said. “CDC and physicians review each case report of death as soon as notified and CDC requests medical records to further assess reports,” it said. More than 92 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines were administered in the United States during that time, the CDC noted. territories, and Americans living abroad. 14 through March 8, VAERS received 1,637 reports of people dying after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the CDC. After 92 million doses, no confirmed vaccine deathsįrom Dec. Christensen said he could not comment on individual cases, because of privacy rules, but repeated that his office has not determined that the vaccine has caused any deaths in Utah.
Intermountain Healthcare spokesperson Jess Gomez declined to comment Tuesday. “They did a blood test and immediately came back and said she was very, very sick, and her liver was not functioning,” Hawley told KUTV. 4 after she received a second dose of vaccine on Feb. 2, her father, Alfred Hawley, described taking Kurill to an Ogden emergency room on Feb. But this much can be gleaned from the VAERS database about the four Utahns whose deaths were reported on it: Neither the CDC nor UDOH releases information about individual patients, because of medical privacy laws. The database is useful, Christensen said, for researchers to find cases and follow up to determine whether they’re valid. … It’s, ‘I think this happened, so I tell you about it.’” “It’s not a scientifically assessed adjudicator, or in any other way moderated. Anybody can get in there and make a report of any kind of adverse reaction that they have,” Christensen said. “Anybody can report something - family, next of kin, doctors. Erik Christensen, the state’s medical examiner. The CDC compiles that information into a database called VAERS, for Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. Utah’s reported deathsīad outcomes after any vaccine - anything from a flu shot to the COVID-19 vaccine - can be reported to the CDC, said state health department spokesperson Tom Hudachko. The state also has looked into each of the four January and February deaths of Utahns reported to the federal database, and “it has not been determined that the vaccine played a role in any of those deaths,” a spokesman for the Utah Department of Health said in Tuesday. To date, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention states on its website, the database “has not detected patterns in cause of death that would indicate a safety problem with COVID-19 vaccines.” Federal health officials say they found “no evidence that vaccination contributed to patient deaths” in the cases reported to the database after COVID-19 inoculations. Health experts caution that a person dying shortly after being inoculated does not mean vaccine caused that person’s death. The reporting includes the deaths of four Utahns after they got a shot. Among the more than half a million Utahns who have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, 154 people had bad reactions that have been reported to a federal database.