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The FDA, NIH, and CDC recommended vaccinating pregnant women at any time, leading to a rise in maternal mortality. A recent paper showed a concerning increase in maternal deaths in the US, erasing decades of progress in obstetrics. Pregnant women are dying with no mention of COVID or vaccines in the report. This alarming trend should be a cause for concern for everyone.

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- First, HHS will act on acetaminophen. - The FDA is responding to clinical and laboratory studies that suggest a potential association between acetaminophen used during pregnancy and adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes including later diagnosis for ADHD and autism. - We have also evaluated the contrary studies that show no association. - HHS will launch a nationwide public service campaign to inform families and protect public health. - HHS wants therefore to encourage clinicians to exercise their best judgment and use of acetaminophen for fevers and pain in pregnancy by prescribing the lowest effective dose for the shortest necessary duration and only when treatment is required. - Some studies have also found the use of acetaminophen in children can potentially prolong viral illnesses. - FDA will drive new research to safeguard mothers, children, families.

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For every 10,000 people given a mammogram, eight will die who wouldn't have from breast cancer. There is a 52% overdiagnosis rate with mammography, meaning many are treated unnecessarily. Safer options include ultrasound, which is definitive and radiation-free, and thermograms to detect metabolic activity. The speaker questions why annual mammograms are recommended, especially for those with dense breast tissue, as radiation from mammograms can cause cancer. A Cochrane review showed a zero net effectiveness rating for mammograms in node-positive cancers. The speaker suggests ultrasound and thermograms should be the standard.

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After 40 years of studying reproductive toxicology, I always refer to these studies when unsure about a drug. The findings are shocking, with numerous cases of pregnancy loss and severe malformations such as missing brains, skulls, and eyes, as well as rib abnormalities. If any of these issues are present in a reproductive toxicology study, I would never prescribe the drug under any circumstances.

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This transcript centers on Erica Kirk’s family, focusing on her mother Loretta Fransby, who is also referred to as Mama Lowe. The speakers discuss her family and the public interest around Erica Kirk’s pregnancy. The conversation includes a claim that there has been a lot of talk about whether the woman in question has truly ever been pregnant, with one speaker asserting, “I’ve been pregnant five times. The first was a miscarriage, gave birth to four, so you bet your ass I zoomed in on that ultrasound screen.” The speaker notes a close-up of the ultrasound image and reveals that they conducted a deep dive into the stages of pregnancy, even though they had limited technology to zoom in on the original image. The speaker explains that based on the stomach size and what is visible, it would be safe to presume the ultrasound shown is a viability ultrasound, which determines if there is a heartbeat and can be performed as early as six weeks. They describe what a six-week ultrasound looks like versus an eight-week ultrasound, and mention that they wanted to compare those visuals to Erica Kirk’s ultrasound but could not zoom in on the provided image due to a lack of technology, describing the effort as a two-hour waste. The speaker adds that they learned at nine weeks babies hiccup—though hiccups do not produce sound. The discussion also touches on the significance of ultrasound appointments, noting that they are a big deal. They point out that Charlie is not seen in the video, though he could be behind the camera, and that the original audio was dubbed over, making it unclear whether there was any interaction. The speakers compare the situation to scenes often depicted in romantic comedies, where a partner’s absence from doctor appointments is a source of tension. The closing remark imagines Erica becoming angry if her partner, Charlie, misses an appointment, emphasizing “Those eyes!” as a reaction. In sum, the transcript covers: the family context around Erica Kirk and Loretta Fransby, public speculation about Erica’s pregnancy, a self-claimed deep dive into ultrasound timelines (six to nine weeks, including the fact that nine weeks can involve hiccups), the importance of ultrasound appointments, and the mystery surrounding Charlie’s presence in the video.

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For every 10,000 people given a mammogram, eight will die who wouldn't have from breast cancer. There's a 52% overdiagnosis rate with mammography, meaning many are treated unnecessarily. Ultrasound is definitive and avoids radiation. Thermograms detect metabolic activity and blood flow, followed by ultrasound if needed. Mammogram radiation can cause breast cancer, especially in those with dense tissue. A Cochrane review showed zero net effectiveness for mammograms in node-positive cancer cases versus controls. Ultrasound and thermograms should be the standard.

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Medical health experts has released an important statement on pregnancy and pain medication. It's part of a study in the British scientific journal Nature, and here's what it does. It cautions pregnant women about using acetaminophen. And that is the active ingredient in Tylenol and many other medications that so many of us use to relieve pain or fever. The statement is backed by nearly 100 scientists and doctors from around the world. They insist a higher level of caution is needed when pregnant people use fever and pain meds that contain acetaminophen, Tylenol. The authors don't have any new evidence showing the drug harms a developing fetus, but their statement does say a growing body of experimental and epidemiological research suggests that prenatal exposure to acetaminophen might alter fetal development, which could in turn increase the risks of certain neurodevelopmental, reproductive, and urogenital disorders.

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A CNN investigation reveals growing concern among scientists and government officials that ultrasound may not be entirely harmless and is potentially overused on pregnant women. They fear possible genetic damage to the fetus, potentially leading to cancer and subtle birth defects that might not appear for years. Geneticist Dr. Arthur Bloom notes early studies suggest diagnostic levels of ultrasound can damage human and rodent cells. Radiologist Dr. Doreen Rebiskind's research shows ultrasound exposure causes abnormal changes in cells, behaving similarly to cells damaged by X-rays. FDA officials admit they cannot definitively say diagnostic ultrasound during pregnancy is safe. An FDA study indicates that children exposed to ultrasound in utero have reduced birth weights. Experts suggest ultrasound should not be used for routine monitoring of low-risk pregnancies. Dr. Bloom estimates that over a million women receive unnecessary ultrasounds. There is concern that subjecting a female fetus to ultrasound near term could affect not only her cells but also all her eggs for the next generation. Ultrasound is used in scans, Doppler fetal monitors, and electronic fetal monitors. No controlled studies exist on the long-term effects of ultrasound on human development.

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I have 43 years of experience in high-risk obstetrics, seeing a large number of patients yearly. Stillbirth rates have decreased from 10 to nearly 6 in my career. In 2021, stillbirth rates for fetuses are alarming, with a rate of 29.3, indicating a significant deviation. Instances of stillbirths and fetal abnormalities are on the rise, possibly linked to the inflammatory effects of vaccines. Safety monitoring systems have not identified increased risks for pregnant individuals receiving vaccines. Inflammation in pregnancy can lead to harm, as known for decades.

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According to the speaker, mammograms cause harm, killing eight people out of every 10,000 screened who would not have died from breast cancer otherwise. The speaker claims there is a 52% overdiagnosis rate with mammography, leading to unnecessary treatment. They suggest ultrasound, which they say is definitive and radiation-free, and thermography as safer alternatives. Thermography detects metabolic activity and blood flow, followed by ultrasound if needed. The speaker questions the yearly recommendation of mammograms, especially for women with dense breast tissue, because the radiation may cause cancer. They cite a Cochrane review indicating zero net effectiveness for mammogram screenings in node-positive cancers. The speaker recommends ultrasound and thermogram as the standard.

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I have 43 years of experience in high-risk obstetrics, seeing a large number of patients yearly. Stillbirth rates have decreased from 10 to 5.8-6 per 1,000 live births. In 2021, the stillbirth rate for fetuses is alarming at 29.3 per 1,000. Reports from Waterloo, Canada show 83 stillbirths out of 4,000 deliveries, with 13 dead fetuses in a 24-hour period. Vaccines are linked to inflammatory effects causing fetal harm. Safety monitoring systems found no significant risks for pregnant women. Inflammation in pregnancy can lead to damage, injury, and death, a known fact for decades.

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"As if pregnancy weren't complicated enough, researchers are now cautioning acetaminophen including Tylenol might affect fetal development." "Experts advise anyone using those meds daily for two weeks or longer to see their doctor." "But it's okay to take Tylenol for a day or two as medically directed." "We still need to remember that it is still the safest medication to use for pain and fever in pregnancy and not treating those conditions in pregnancy also have the risks." "The Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada tells CBC News the evidence for harm is based mainly on animal studies and encourages more research." "pregnant people should take acetaminophen in the lowest dose possible for the shortest period of time necessary." "Tanesha now has a happy, healthy one month old, but she feels doctors should make patients aware of the risks." "When you're pregnant, you really don't wanna take chances."

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First, effective immediately, the FDA will be notifying physicians that the use of Acetaminophen during pregnancy can be associated with a very increased risk of autism. So taking Tylenol is not good. For this reason, they are strongly recommending that women limit Tylenol use during pregnancy unless medically necessary, in cases of extremely high fever that you feel you can't tough it out. If you can't tough it out, you'll take a Tylenol, but it'll be very sparingly. It can be something that's very dangerous to the woman's health—a fever that's very, very dangerous and, ideally, a doctor's decision. I think you shouldn't take it, and you shouldn't take it during the entire pregnancy. They may tell you that toward the end of the pregnancy, you shouldn't take it during the entire. And you shouldn't give the child the Tylenol every time he goes.

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Diagnostic ultrasound may pose dangers, despite doctors claiming there is no proof. Experimental studies allegedly show ultrasound can damage a child's biochemistry and immune system, and delay central nervous system maturation. According to the Oxford Child Cancer Study, there is an excess incidence of leukemia in children born to mothers exposed to diagnostic ultrasound during pregnancy. Ultrasound has replaced X-rays, which were previously linked to leukemia. Doctors may expose mothers to ultrasound without their knowledge or consent in four instances: using a Doppler stethoscope to hear the baby's heartbeat (continuous wave ultrasound), during ultrasound scans to view the baby's organs (intermittent wave ultrasound), guiding needles during amniocentesis, and during fetal monitoring. Mothers are encouraged to research ultrasound dangers, referencing government publications like the HHS's "Ultrasound Overview."

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Speaker 1 discusses important findings from autism research that families should know when making decisions. The FDA will act on acetaminophen use during pregnancy, with the FDA responding to clinical and laboratory studies that suggest a potential association between acetaminophen used during pregnancy and adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes, including later diagnosis of ADHD and autism. Scientists have proposed biological mechanisms linking prenatal acetaminophen exposure to altered brain development, and the FDA has evaluated contrary studies that show no association. Today, the FDA will issue a physician’s notice about the risk of acetaminophen during pregnancy and begin the process to initiate a safety label change. HHS will launch a nationwide public service campaign to inform families and protect public health. The FDA recognizes that acetaminophen is often the only tool for fevers and pain in pregnancy, as other alternatives have well-documented adverse effects. HHS encourages clinicians to exercise their best judgment and use acetaminophen for fevers and pain in pregnancy by prescribing the lowest effective dose for the shortest necessary duration and only when treatment is required. Thanks to politicization of science, the safety of acetaminophen against the risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in young children has never been validated. Prudent medicine therefore suggests caution with acetaminophen use by young children, given that strong evidence also associates it with liver toxicity. Some studies have found that use of acetaminophen in children can potentially prolong viral illnesses. The FDA will drive new research to safeguard mothers, children, and families. In addition to a possible acetaminophen connection to autism for pregnant women, infants, and toddlers, the research has revealed that folate deficiency in a child’s brain can lead to autism. There are also other confirmation studies. One finding cited is that two studies show children who are circumcised early have double the rate of autism, highly likely because they’re given Tylenol. The speaker notes that none of this is positive, but it is information that should be paid attention to. Speaker 0 comments that there is a tremendous amount of proof or evidence, though he is not a doctor, and that he studied this a long time ago.

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There is growing concern that ultrasound may not be entirely harmless. Some studies suggest that diagnostic levels of ultrasound can cause genetic damage and abnormal cell behavior. While experts have no evidence of harm to human fetuses, they advise caution and limited use of ultrasound until more is known. The FDA has conducted research on ultrasound and found that it may lead to low birth weight in babies. However, some experts believe that warnings about ultrasound are unnecessary and may cause unnecessary fear. Overuse of ultrasound is also a concern, with more than 50% of pregnant women receiving it, even when not medically necessary. Until more is known, it is recommended to use ultrasound sparingly to avoid potential long-term genetic effects.

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I have decades of experience in high-risk obstetrics and have seen a rise in stillbirth rates, with some cases showing alarming numbers of fetal deaths and complications. The vaccine has been linked to inflammatory effects that can harm pregnancies. Despite safety monitoring systems finding no significant risks, inflammation in pregnancy can lead to serious consequences.

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Researchers caution acetaminophen including Tylenol might affect fetal development. In a new consensus statement, international scientists insist there's a growing body of research suggesting acetaminophen could increase the risks of certain neurodevelopmental, reproductive and urogenital disorders, adding the drug could be linked to conditions such as ADHD and fertility issues. "It's important to realize that acetaminophen is a drug like any other drug." Along with Tylenol, acetaminophen is in more than 600 pain medications. Experts advise anyone using those meds daily for two weeks or longer to see their doctor. But it's okay to take Tylenol for a day or two as medically directed. The Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada tells CBC News the evidence for harm is based mainly on animal studies and encourages more research. "When you're pregnant, you really don't wanna take chances."

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They literally went into the rooms. They went into these babies' rooms, in over 50 households. They literally measured the physical EMF radiation that was in the babies' rooms. That accounts for smart TVs, baby monitors, cellular tower distance, and Wi-Fi. All this stuff combined contributes to this total EMF load here. And those babies who were in the high EMF rooms, high EMF households suffered triple increased risks of neurodevelopmental disorders, and they accounted for below birth rate. So this wasn't because they were born too early. They accounted for income. It wasn't because, you know, they had a lot of money and a lot of, you know, going to the doctors often and getting screened. It appeared because it was due to these little babies that are just developing, getting bombarded with artificial electromagnetic radiation, which appears to be influencing their development process.

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The speaker discusses her miscarriage, which occurred two to four hours after an ultrasound at five and a half to six weeks of pregnancy. An RN told her she was the sixth person recently to miscarry after an ultrasound. Research led her to a study where pregnant women received two or more ultrasound scans. One study divided over 9,000 women into two groups. The first group received an ultrasound scan between sixteen and twenty weeks, and the second group received no ultrasound scan. The results showed 20 miscarriages in the first ultrasound group and none in the second group. She believes ultrasounds are not worth the risk, and that many times, if a scan sees something wrong, babies are born completely normal anyway. She advises being patient and trusting baby movement. She encourages viewers to consider not getting ultrasounds or using Dopplers, and to check out the links she listed below.

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Mammograms as a screening practice are not recommended because they do terrible harm. The Cochrane Collaboration also advises against mammograms. The US Preventative Services Task Force suggests mammograms for women over 50 only after a thorough discussion of the benefits and risks, highlighting overdiagnosis as a risk. Screening 2,000 women with mammograms saves one life but diagnoses 5-50 women with breast cancer they would have never known they had or died from, turning them into cancer victims. It also causes 600-1000 of the 2,000 women to undergo further testing and treatment. Mammograms rarely save lives and always do harm, so they should not be done as a screening tool.

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Experts, including the speaker, believe that the COVID-19 vaccine is safe for pregnant women based on extensive research. The vaccines have been proven safe and effective in the general population, without affecting fertility rates. They also provide protection against COVID-19 for pregnant women. The speaker, if pregnant, would definitely get vaccinated as the risks of the vaccine are much lower than the risks of the disease itself. Even children are eager to get vaccinated to regain their normal lives. However, another speaker raises concerns about fetal and chromosomal malformations, premature births, and respiratory issues after mRNA injections. They accuse pharmaceutical companies of hiding information about the deaths of two babies due to transplacental exposure to the vaccine. They call for attorney generals to investigate these claims. The Moderna documents are said to contain similar shocking information.

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In the past, obstetrics has seen a series of interventions with harmful consequences. X-rays were used in the 1930s to measure pelvises, but they were later found to cause cancer in babies. In the 1950s and 1960s, a drug called Thalidomide resulted in babies being born without limbs. In the 1990s, the use of Cytotek to induce labor in women with previous caesareans led to numerous ruptured uteruses and deaths of babies. Unfortunately, there hasn't been enough careful study of the long-term effects of these interventions in obstetric practice. To ensure a more humanized birth experience, it may be best to explore alternative options.

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The statement is backed by nearly 100 scientists and doctors from around the world. They insist a higher level of caution is needed when pregnant people use fever and pain meds that contain acetaminophen, Tylenol. The authors don't have any new evidence showing the drug harms a developing fetus, but their statement does say a growing body of experimental and epidemiological research suggests that prenatal exposure to acetaminophen might alter fetal development, which could in turn increase the risks of certain neurodevelopmental, reproductive, and urogenital disorders. It cautions pregnant women about using acetaminophen. And that is the active ingredient in Tylenol and many other medications that so many of us use to relieve pain or fever.

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Pregnant women who received COVID-19 shots experienced concerning effects, according to maternal fetal medicine expert Dr. Against Thorpe. The shots quickly spread throughout the body, crossing barriers like the placenta and blood-brain barriers in both the mother and fetus. Compared to the flu vaccine, COVID-19 shots led to more adverse events in women of reproductive age. Data showed a 27-fold higher risk of miscarriage and over twice the risk of negative fetal outcomes across six categories. Additionally, birth rates in several European countries dropped significantly after widespread COVID-19 vaccination. As a result, researchers are urging the immediate suspension of COVID-19 vaccination for individuals of childbearing and reproductive age.
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