Posted on 11/15/2022 8:43:40 AM PST by GaltMeister
Yep!
But did they all take the safe and effective jab?
I am going to verify this with a trusted PA in a childrens hospital. If RSV is on the rise, it is something that cannot be hidden. These are children four and under, including babies. It is a critical illness that often requires hospitalization, iirc.
but lets get the vaxx on the child schedule
Is it possible that all the isolation of the previous 24 months has led to a decline in immunity?
“Within 28 days after vaccination, some respiratory tract-related infections were reported with greater frequency...”
Early sign that the shots might be damaging the immune system.
That’s what I’ve read. 26 years ago, my twins almost died of RSV. Both were on ventilators; one for a month and the other has a brain injury from it. It can be terrible for babies
I’d be doubtful, since the isolation was so limited it didn’t seem to stop any diseases from spreading during that time.
As a retired pediatric nurse, RSV has been around forever. There have been peaks of increasing RSV cases in past years in which we had no beds and babies were waiting in the ER for a bed. I think the RSV cases are high this year due to isolation from the RSV virus during the covid pandemic. Additionally, media cannot let go of virus news, and have grasped onto RSV to capture more audience. I do not recall RSV being in the news in previous peak years of that virus.
I thought there was almost no flu and RSV during that time?
I would certainly think so, and wondered that previously.
I hadn’t been exposed to any sick person for multiple years.
That’s never occurred before in my entire life.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), also called human respiratory syncytial virus and human orthopneumovirus, is a common, contagious airborne virus that causes infections of the respiratory tract. ...Most children will experience at least one RSV infection by age 2. Most childhood RSV infections are fairly self-limited with typical upper respiratory tract signs and symptoms, such as nasal congestion, runny nose, cough, and low-grade fever... ...Reinfection with RSV remains common throughout life. Reinfection in adulthood often produces only mild to moderate symptoms indistinguishable from the common cold or sinus infection...
RSV was first discovered in 1956 when researchers isolated a virus from a population of chimpanzees with respiratory illness. They named the virus CCA (Chimpanzee Coryza Agent), although it was later realized that the chimpanzees caught the infection from their caretakers. In 1957, this same virus was identified by Robert M. Chanock in children with respiratory illness. Studies of human antibodies in infants and children revealed that the infection was common in early life. The virus was later renamed human orthopneumovirus, or human respiratory syncytial virus (hRSV).
Several other pneumoviruses exist that show great similarity to hRSV. Most notable of these is bovine RSV (bRSV), which shares approximately 80% of its genome with hRSV. It also shares hRSV's predilection for the young, causing more severe disease in calves less than 6 months old. Because bRSV-infected calves have an almost identical presentation to hRSV-infected children, this has proven to be an important animal model in RSV research.
My question is how many times have most people had this and just thought it was a cold?
How many colds have you had in your life?
I've had maybe 50. So maybe half were RSV?
Not a big deal. Viral and germ-based critters are trying to kill us our whole life, and in the end, they win, or we lose.
‘As a retired pediatric nurse, RSV has been around forever.’
I thought RSV was a virus...
I despise Rats
Well, when you know that other respiratory viruses causes a PCR test to test positive for COVID, then you may be skeptical about the claims that cases of flu or RSV just magically disappeared.
2 young infants were on our church prayer list with RSV and in hospitals.
One is out of a hospital now, and one is still being treated in the hospital.
Agree! It is a serious virus in children. My son is 25, he is my third and I had never heard of RSV until he got it at 2 weeks old. What I came to find out was that even back then they would open pediatric RSV wards during the season to treat. I spent over a week in that unit. In most cases RSV is not life threatening and most children have had it before they reach school age and it presents as a cold. What should be looked at is why children’s immune systems are weaker. Masking? Over sterilization? Isolation? Vaccines?
The medical version of the protection racquet.
And I just got lectured at a family reunion for being the only on e non vaccinated when I said, “hell, no I am vaccinated. I’m not putting that shiit in my body.”
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