yes, because if you have bacon & eggs twice a week, you will die of a heart attack in a few months
from your link
“There is currently no association established between the Covid-19 vaccines and myocardial infarction, and myocardial infarction is not listed as a potential side effect in any of the Covid-19 vaccines.”
so the CDC/VAERS is a bunch of liars, I guess
Originally Posted by FatCity
I'll tell you what I told texassapper. Please use your numeracy skills. If you do, you won't fall for this stuff.
First you present a chart showing that the incidence of myocarditis, after vaccines, ranged from .00001% to 0.002%. This doesn't mean these people died from myocarditis. In this study of 2,392,924 people who received at least one dose of mRNA vaccines, there were 15 cases of confirmed myocarditis. For all 15 cases, "symptoms resolved with conservative management," and "no patients required ICU admission or admission after discharge."
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jam...rticle/2784800
Then, you make the jump from that to a hospital in Scotland that experienced a 25% increase in a particular type of heart attack. You don't explain how a .00001% to .002% incidence of nonfatal myocarditis translates to an increase of 25% in heart attacks. Tx dot and I provided a much more likely explanation - the increase was attributable to other causes, some of which were related to lockdowns.
Now apparently you're confusing myocarditis with myocardial infarction. A myocardial infarction is a heart attack. It's not exactly brain surgery determining if the vaccines resulted in a major increase in the number of heart attacks. You look at the incidence of heart attacks in the population that was vaccinated vs. the unvaccinated. There's no reason to disbelieve the CDC.
If there were a way to make a wager anonymously on a hooker board, I'd bet a pretty penny that the number of deaths from heart disease in 2021, when people were getting vaccinated, will be lower or not significantly greater (say not more than 1% greater) than the number in 2020. This is something that's easy to check, as I bet the Journal of the American Medical Association or the CDC will come out with something similar to this next year:
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jam...rticle/2778234
When it does, I'll try to remember to post it and come back and rub your nose in it.