After 2 Lawsuits CDC Forced to Reveal its V-Safe Vaccine Data
The CDC has repeatedly refused to release its data on vaccine injuries. Now we know why and it is explosive.
Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN) just recently won a major lawsuit brought against the CDC, requiring the agency to turn over its V-safe COVID Vaccine Injury Data.
In order to collect health evaluations following vaccination against COVID-19, the CDC developed a tool called V-safe that runs on smartphones. Over 10 million participants signed up and submitted their health data.
“V-safe provides personalized and confidential health check-ins via text messages and web surveys so you can quickly and easily share with CDC how you, or your dependent, feel after getting a COVID-19 vaccine. This information helps CDC monitor the safety of COVID-19 vaccines in near real time,” said CDC.
After a successful lawsuit, ICAN was granted access to V-safe COVID Vaccine Injury Data from the CDC.
According to the data, Out of the 10 million people who used v-safe, 3,353,110 were hurt.
And 6,458,751 health impacts were reported by v-safe users.
Options for health impacts were:
unable to work or attend school;
unable to do your normal daily activities; and/or
get care from a doctor or other healthcare professional.
Each user could have submitted more than one health impact both during one check-in or over time in multiple check-ins.
On Tuesday’s episode of “Fox News @ Night” with Chase Gallagher, human rights and vaccine attorney Aaron Siri discussed the CDC data on vaccine risk and impact.
It took 463 days and two lawsuits for CDC to turn over the data to Aaron Siri.
“Of the 10 million users within V-safe, 7.7% of them had to seek medical care after vaccination. That is an incredibly high percentage, it appears to me,” Siri said.
“7.7 required medical care, talking about emergency rooms, hospitalizations. And on top of that, another 2.5 million, we’re talking 25% missed work or school or had bad reactions to the vaccine,” Gallagher said.
Watch the video below: