By John Wayne on Friday, 10 June 2022
Category: Race, Culture, Nation

Is Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS) Another Adverse Effect of the Covid Vaxxes? By Brian Simpson

The appropriately named SADS, Sudden Adult Death Syndrome, has caught the eye of medical technocrats. The term is an umbrella term referring to the sudden deaths of otherwise healthy young people, under 40-years, who usually die of cardiac arrests. What is odd is that a full post-mortem does not find an “obvious cause of death.” There have been 750 people in Victoria suffering such cardiac arrests, and 100 of these have no cause found even after a full autopsy. Note that these are fit and healthy people who often go to the gym.

So, there is no cause after a full autopsy. But what is a “full autopsy”? Usually if one sets out with a defined paradigm of problems, one does not think outside the square, especially if, what is highly likely, these young people were fully vaxxed up. There is no information about this, and the matter does not seem to even surface in medical consciousness, since the vaxxes are regarded as items of religious faith, about which what used to be scientific judgment is suspended. Maybe this is an uncaused “mysterious” phenomenon, perhaps due to black magic, who knows, for when there are no causes at all one is free to speculate. But, keeping to material science, the vaxxes should be investigated. It would be a mighty inconvenient truth if these “lifesaving” concoctions turned out to be the cause. But, now that the medical technocrats have a label for it, SADS will become just another cause of death; nothing to see here.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10895067/Doctors-trying-determine-young-people-suddenly-dying.html?ito=push-notification&ci=gATjUV1HQr&cri=jKJ_Yv6Lzr&si=mIsznWj1izHY&xi=77d91f20-cee4-482e-a65e-d6b2045f841f&ai=10895067

 

“People aged under 40 are being urged to have their hearts checked because they may potentially be at risk of Sudden Adult Death Syndrome. 

The syndrome, known as SADS, has been fatal for all kinds of people regardless of whether they maintain a fit and healthy lifestyle.

SADS is an 'umbrella term to describe unexpected deaths in young people', said The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, most commonly occurring in people under 40 years of age.

The term is used when a post-mortem cannot find an obvious cause of death. 

The US-based SADS Foundation has said that over half of the 4,000 annual SADS deaths of children, teens or young adults have one of the top two warning signs present.

Those signs include a family history of a SADS diagnosis or sudden unexplained death of a family member, and fainting or seizure during exercise, or when excited or startled, reported news.com.au.

Last year a 31-year-old woman, Catherine Keane, died in her sleep while living with two friends in Dublin.

Her mother Margherita Cummins told the Irish Mirror, 'They were all working from home so no one really paid attention when Catherine didn't come down for breakfast.'

'They sent her a text at 11.20am and when she didn't reply, they checked her room and found she had passed.

'Her friend heard a noise in her room at 3.56am and believes now that is when she died.' 

Ms Cummins stated that her daughter 'went to the gym and walked 10,000 steps every day'.

'I take some comfort in that she went in her sleep and knew no pain and I'm grateful for that. I always worried about the kids driving in the car but never saw this coming. I never thought I'd ever lose a child in my life,' 

Melbourne's Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute is developing the country's first SADS registry.  

'There are approximately 750 cases per year of people aged under 50 in Victoria suddenly having their heart stop (cardiac arrest),' a spokesperson said.

'Of these, approximately 100 young people per year will have no cause found even after extensive investigations such as a full autopsy (SADS phenomenon).'

Cardiologist and researcher Dr Elizabeth Paratz said: 'Baker's registry was the first in the country and one of only a few in the world that combined ambulance, hospital and forensics information.'

'(It allows you to see) people have had the cardiac arrest and no cause was found on the back end,' Dr Paratz said.

She believes the potential lack of awareness may be due to the fact 'a lot of it takes place outside of traditional medical settings'.

'The majority of these SADS events, 90 per cent, occur outside the hospital – the person doesn't make it – so it's actually ambulance staff and forensics caring for the bulk of these patients,' Dr Paratz said. 

'I think even doctors underestimate it. We only see the 10 per cent who survive and make it to hospital. We only see the tip of the iceberg ourselves.'

For family and friends of victims, SADS is a 'very hard entity to grasp' because it's a 'diagnosis of nothing', Dr Paratz added.”

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