Shocking Number of Front Line Health Care Workers Refusing COVID-19 Vaccine

Text Drivers are Killers

Joe Biden - "Time to put Trump in the bullseye."
These people know the "vaccine" is experimental and covid is just a cold anyway.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/20...ealth-care-workers-refusing-covid-19-vaccine/

jan 1 2021 Front line health care workers are refusing to take the COVID-19 China coronavirus vaccine in large numbers, with Ohio reporting a 60 percent refusal rate among nursing home workers. In southern California anywhere from 20 to 50 percent of health care workers are reported to have refused the vaccine.

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine (R) spoke about the shocking vaccine refusal rate at a press conference Wednesday.

Gov. Mike DeWine on Wednesday said that a whopping 60% of nursing home workers who have been offered the vaccine have refused it.

…“Our bigger concern is the amount of staff who are not taking it,” DeWine said. “I don’t have data in front of me, but anecdotally, it looks like somewhere around 40% of staff at nursing homes are taking the vaccines and 60% are not taking it.”
 
Who is holding out from a demographic perspective? My best guess is that Black HCWs may be the largest group.

No such statistics are being compiled, AFAIK, and if they were, it would be likely be considered racist to publish any conclusion that might support your guess.
 
WuFlu = Bad flu (in terms of impact)

Now I need to go put on two masks & hide under my bed.

That won't save you, according to the devout (and fanatical) Branch Covidians.

You need repeated injections and still need to wear a mask and practice social distancing, because High Priest Fauci says "I keep saying that even though you get vaccinated, we should not eliminate, at all, public health measures like wearing masks because we don't know yet what the effect is on transmissibility. "We don't know that vaccinating people prevents infection. I mean, if everybody gets vaccinated, of course that's good."


https://www.newsweek.com/coronavirus-anthony-fauci-covid-vaccine-passport-mandatory-vaccinations-travel-1558303
 
These people know the "vaccine" is experimental and covid is just a cold anyway.

I was reading last night that nationwide only 22% of the doses sent out have been put into people, and that shockingly only 50,000 people in Washington have taken the first dose.

This is going to be a problem.
 
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Did you know that the two leading vaccine makers used a never-before-approved technology to genetically alter your cells so they start making COVID proteins?

Sorry, of course not. Totally forgot, you don't matter.

Just roll up your sleeve and get in line, peasant.

Also, if anything goes wrong, forget about suing. The firms producing the vaccines have so much confidence in the safety of their products they've gotten immunity from liability.

Moderna is not even making "their" vaccine, they contracted that out.
 
Are you mocking these heroes?

It's in Ohio, Billy. On top of that it's nursing home and assisted living workers. They are no heroes refusing a vaccine at these places. In fact, it kind of goes against the jobs calling and makes you a danger to those you are there to help. If they want to forgo the vaccine that's perfectly fine but they need to find a different profession. It is like having an asthmatic working at Kingsford Charcoal.
 
Bret and Heather were talking the other week how it is really risky to start out with these experimental vaccines by giving them to all of the healthcare workers first, because if it turns out bad we lose all of our healthcare workers. Plus most of them are at very low risk of dying of COVID. What we should be doing is giving it to the old first, if the vaccine turns out to be a killer then they still had most of their lives, plus they are the ones that are at risk of dying of COVID.

Maybe healthcare workers are listening.
 

FDA inspectors visited Catalent's Bloomington facility in October 2019, and found that it had problems with making sure sterile products weren't contaminated with bacterial or fungal particles.

Inspectors also wrote that the facility had problems storing pharmaceuticals at the right temperature and humidity levels.

In September, the Indiana facility received another visit from the FDA.

Inspectors again found that the employees weren't following rules to prevent microbial contamination.

For example, employees weren't making sure sterile forceps didn't touch non-sterile surfaces, and they didn't follow rules around sanitizing gloved hands in certain situations involving vials and syringes.

"These are easy to fix," says Dinesh Thakur, who raised the alarm about quality-control problems at generics drugmaker Ranbaxy, resulting in a 2013 guilty plea and a $500 million settlement. "This is like, you know, within a week, you can try and get this thing wrapped up properly."

He called it "really concerning." "If you're told in 2019 to fix it, you have a year to fix it and we have to make the same observation another time? Then that would cause me to become a little concerned."

Catalent spokesperson Chris Halling told NPR in an email that the facility was able to resolve its findings and satisfy the FDA in 2019 and 2020.

Moderna declined to comment.

Catalent is filling vials and getting them ready to send around the country, but other facilities are responsible for making the mRNA, the key substance at the heart of the vaccine, that Catalent puts in those vials.

Another well-known contract manufacturing company, Lonza, told investors in October that it is working with Moderna to make its coronavirus vaccine drug substance. Lonza is using two sites: one in Portsmouth, N.H., and another in Visp, Switzerland. The Moderna vaccine substance the new Swiss that facility makes won't be bound for the United States.

Moderna has said that it's using a relatively new facility in Norwood, Mass., to make the vaccine.

Although the facility was built in 2018, it wasn't registered with the FDA until this week and has never been inspected, records show. Typically, new facilities need to be inspected before the agency will allow their products to be released.

"While the design of the facility is based on current standards for biotechnology facilities, it has not been reviewed or pre-approved by any regulatory agency, nor has the facility been inspected by any regulatory agency such as the FDA," the company wrote in a June 2020 regulatory filing.
 
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