Study Confirms Covid ‘Vaccines’ Cause Irregular Menstrual Bleeding

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Study Confirms Covid ‘Vaccines’ Cause Irregular Menstrual Bleeding

A team of scientists in France has just published the results of their new study confirming that Covid mRNA shots harm female fertility.

The study was conducted by scientists from EPI-PHARE a shared unit of the French National Agency for the Safety of Medicines and Health Products (ANSM) and the French National Health Insurance (Cnam).

Jérémie Botton, PhD, PharmD, MPH led the team of scientists.

The researchers designed a national study randomly matching the cases of non-pregnant 15-50-year-old women who had a hospital discharge diagnosis of heavy menstrual bleeding between May 12, 2021, and August 31, 2022.

Those cases were matched with up to 30 controls of the same age, place of residence, social deprivation index, and contraceptive use profile at the date of case hospital admission.

The case-control study tapped into the comprehensive data of the French National Health Data System as part of an investigation into women who received Covid “vaccines.”

In previous studies, Covid mRNA injections had been inconsistently associated with an increased risk of heavy menstrual bleeding.

Hence, the goal of the investigators in this study was to assess the risk of heavy menstrual bleeding requiring hospital care following Covid vaccination according to the number of doses received and the time elapsed since they took the shot.

The study found that the Covid mRNA “vaccines” are associated with an increased risk of heavy menstrual bleeding during the three-month period following primary series vaccination.

No increased risk was found beyond 3 months after primary vaccination nor following booster doses.

The recent bombshell was published in the October edition of the peer-reviewed journal Vaccine.

Out of 4610 cases and 89,375 matched controls with a median age of 42 years, the French investigators found that the risk of hospital care for heavy menstrual bleeding surged among vaccinated women when compared to unvaccinated.

They certainly found a meaningful signal.

This study endpoint was increased in those who received the last dose of Covid mRNA primary vaccination in the preceding 1–3 months (Odds Ratio, 1.20 [95% confidence interval, 1.07–1.35]).

Importantly, the identified association with the Covid mRNA “vaccines” was notable “among women residing in the most deprived municipalities (1.28 [1.07–1.52]) and those who were not using hormonal contraception (1.28 [1.11–1.48]).”

A total of 103 cases [54–196] were estimated to be attributable to primary vaccination in France if a causal relationship is assumed.

Importantly, the scientists warn that the total number of women experiencing heavy menstrual bleeding after Covid vaccination is likely to be underestimated.

Also, the researchers suggest in their narrative that “restriction to cases identified at hospital may at least partly explain the absence of association observed among women residing in the least socioeconomically disadvantaged areas, among whom any problems of heavy menstrual bleeding may more likely be managed on an outpatient basis without the need for hospitalization.”

The news comes amid growing concerns about the long-term impact of Covid mRNA injections.

A disturbing study published earlier this year revealed that Covid mRNA shots have caused widespread harm to fertility rates in young men.

The study, conducted by leading researchers in Denmark, analyzed semen samples from 7,000 men aged 18 to 45 years old.

The researchers note that roughly half of the participants were aged 18 to 24.

During the study, the researchers examined the quality of semen in potential donors in Denmark between 2017 and 2022.

What the study found is that semen volume, sperm concentration, and total sperm count did not change significantly over the years monitored.

However, both motile sperm concentration and total motile sperm count (TMSC) decreased significantly among those accepted and rejected as donors.

The decline in motile sperm (sperm capable of independent movement) greatly concerned the researchers.

In the study’s paper, they stressed that this, “has potential implications for human fertility, because sperm motility is correlated with the probability of conception.”

The study revealed that motile sperm concentration dropped by 16 percent, and TMSC by 22 percent, among the entire donor pool, and by 17 percent and 21 percent among those accepted as donors.