Now WHO Tells Us! By Chris Knight (Florida)
Across the West, especially the US, and vaccine mad Australia, the health authorities promoted that young people, from babies, to children to teens, needed the Covid shots, eternally. Thus, Australia is outdoing us in mania, with the fifth vax up and running, and with their winter approaching, as we slip into summer here in the US, they will no doubt push some people, perhaps the so-called “vulnerable,” to have a sixth jab of the magic goo. And so on, for eternity. Covid, not diamonds, are forever.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwbEuzJCnqI
But, now, the World Health Organization has posted on its website, that healthy children and teens do not need the Covid-19 vaccines. Thus, a teen of 17 years, is deemed a low priority. But if this is so, why should someone 18, 19, 20, … be any different? There is no real cut off line, showing how arbitrary it is. And, if this is true now, it was true in the past, so young people, a low risk group, were never threatened by Covid. It was all social control.
“Healthy children and teens likely don’t need COVID-19 vaccinations, according to updated guidance posted on the website of the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday.
WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) met last week to create a revised roadmap for COVID vaccinations.
The new roadmap defines three priority groups — high, medium and low — based on the "risk of severe disease and death" when contracting the virus.
Healthy kids between 6 months and 17 years old are now deemed low priority.
The agency said that for this group, "traditional essential vaccines" for illnesses like rotavirus, measles, polio and pneumococcal conjugate have a greater impact.
In the new roadmap, the agency also released updated guidance on COVID booster doses.
"Updated to reflect that much of the population is either vaccinated or previously infected with COVID-19, or both, the revised roadmap reemphasizes the importance of vaccinating those still at-risk of severe disease, mostly older adults and those with underlying conditions, including with additional boosters," stated SAGE Chair Dr. Hanna Nohynek in a press release on the WHO website.
For healthy adults under 60 — a group that is deemed medium priority — SAGE recommends the full vaccine series and one booster dose but does not recommend additional boosters.
SAGE recommends primary series and first booster doses for the medium priority group. Although additional boosters are safe for this group, SAGE does not routinely recommend them, given the comparatively low public health returns.
"Countries should consider their specific context in deciding whether to continue vaccinating low-risk groups, like healthy children and adolescents, while not compromising the routine vaccines that are so crucial for the health and well-being of this age group," the doctor continued.”
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