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COVID protection and treating anemia

Post-COVID Recovery & COVID-19 | Last Active: Jan 7, 2023 | Replies (26)

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@linray

I cannot believe what I am reading about how vaccines have affected blood & iron…I have had 4 blood transfusions & 2 Iron infusions in 5 months.I have been tested for bleeds which have shown nothing.never in my life have I had anything like this.I have been hospitalised twice this year because bloods were dangerously low.I am currently waiting on more results for bloods.coming across this site has given me an insight to what could have possibly caused this.

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Replies to "I cannot believe what I am reading about how vaccines have affected blood & iron…I have..."

linray, I am sorry you are going through this.

Given your current circumstances I would recommend finding an open minded primary care doctor that is current on post covid or long covid issues.

On thing to remember is that the shot you received is not technically a vaccine and was rushed to market for very political reasons. Pfizer,only now, is openly admitting that it did not due full testing. This was known by the CDC and “leading” doctors and scientists but not openly shared.

In fact the governments stance is changing on things like ivermectin.

The reason I bring these cases up is not to say all healthcare professionals are uncaring or bad. But,rather, to recognize that the medical community is just as diverse as any large population. If your current doc isn’t staying current on the rapidly changing knowledge around long covid or chooses to not believe that horrible mistakes were made and bad “science “ occurred early on, due to political pressure, then find one that is more open minded.

It’s my experience that doctors with private practice are far less influenced by pressures from an administration structure.

Keep looking and best wishes.

Editor's Note:
From the Community Director
- Understanding How COVID-19 Vaccines Work https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/different-vaccines/how-they-work.html
"Currently, there are three main types of COVID-19 vaccines that are approved or authorized for use in the United States: mRNA, viral vector, and protein subunit. Each type of vaccine prompts our bodies to recognize and help protect us from the virus that causes COVID-19.

mRNA vaccines use mRNA created in a laboratory to teach our cells how to make a protein—or even just a piece of a protein—that triggers an immune response inside our bodies.

Researchers have been studying and working with mRNA vaccines for decades."