2021-05-16 05:54:42
#Vaccination_News
1. An 8-month-old baby boy from upstate Baldwinsville, NY, is the youngest person in the world to receive two doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine.
Vincenzo “Enzo” Mincolla got his second jab Wednesday as part of a clinical trial being conducted by Upstate Medical University, Syracuse.com reported.
The hospital is one of four sites in the US testing the Pfizer vaccine in children under age 5. The US is the only country conducting such tests right now.
The federal government approved Pfizer’s shots for kids as young as 12 on Wednesday.
Enzo is one of 16 infants at the four sites participating in Phase 1 of the trial that includes kids ages 6 months to 2 years old.
The baby got his first shot three weeks ago, before reaching 8 months old. Dr. Joseph Domashowske, an Upstate pediatric infectious disease doctor conducting the trial, told the outlet he is the youngest recipient. There are five other babies participating in the Upstate trial.
Enzo’s parents, Mike and Marissa Mincolla, are doctors.
via nypost.com
The U.S. is ahead of the planet in childhood vaccinations.
2. While indigenous communities in Mexico are rejecting the COVID-19 shot, the international effort to convince the public to take the jab is in full effect.
In early March, CNN reported that “Whole towns are refusing Covid-19 vaccines in Mexico”, profiling two of more than a dozen municipalities which have rejected COVID-19 shots for one reason or another. CNN reported on statements made by residents of Aldama and San Juan Cancuc, small indigenous towns located in the central highlands of the Mexican state of Chiapas.
The indigenous communities of Mexico (and many Mexicans in general) have a history of mistrusting the federal government. After generations of being ignored or colonized, the communities are largely autonomous and operate under their own rule of law. It is this history which has caused several communities in Chiapas and other parts of Mexico to reject the COVID-19 shots altogether.
Of course, CNN reports that “a lack of information and conspiracy theories that have spread in the region like wildfire are to blame for vaccine hesitancy.” Aldama’s town secretary Tomás López Pérez told CNN that because his people “don’t really know what vaccines are made of, we believe that they contain the [Covid-19] virus and that’s the main reason why people don’t want to get vaccinated.”
via activistpost.com
Strong conservative societies prevent globalists from carrying out their plans.
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