Following the recent revelation of Kate Middleton's cancer diagnosis at the young age of 42, many have noticed a concerning trend: an increasing number of young and otherwise healthy individuals being diagnosed with cancer and dying since the vaccine rollout. And studies have confirmed that these concerns are not unfounded.
A study shared on ResearchGate analyzed CDC data from 2010 to 2022 and focused on individuals aged 15 to 44. The study specifically investigated trends in neoplasms, which are abnormal tissue masses that can be malignant or benign cancerous tumors. The findings were alarming.
Before the pandemic, overall cancer deaths were declining for this age group. However, in 2020, following the vaccine rollout, there was a spontaneous reversal of this trend. The rise in excess mortality from neoplasms reported as the underlying cause of death started in 2020 at 1.7% and accelerated significantly in 2021 at 5.6%. By 2022, the increase reached 7.9%. These increases were highly statistically significant, indicating a concerning and novel phenomenon.
The researchers acknowledge that establishing a direct causal relationship between the COVID-19 vaccine or other factors and the development of cancer is challenging due to the slow development of cancer itself. However, they highlight that reports of cancers following COVID-19 vaccinations made to CDC's VAERS (Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System) were more numerous than for all previous vaccines combined since 1990.
Moreover, it's not just cancer that is on the rise. Rates of myocarditis, inflammation of the heart muscle, have also skyrocketed among those who received the COVID-19 vaccine. A peer-reviewed study published in Sage Journals focused on three vaccines—Pfizer-BioNTech BNT162b2, Moderna mRNA-1273, and Janssen Ad26.COV2.S—and found that reports of myocarditis post-vaccination in 2021 were 223 times higher than the average for all vaccines combined over the past 30 years. The study highlighted that myocarditis predominantly affected youths and males, with a significant number of cases requiring emergency care and hospitalization. Shockingly, 92 individuals in the study died from myocarditis.