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MojSpletnik NOVICE | Ameriška zdravnica dr. Casey Means se sprašuje, zakaj so otroci v ZDA cepljeni proti boleznim, ki jih ne morejo dobiti? ...
Casey Means: Why are we injecting newborns with a vaccine for a disease they can’t catch?
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Ask yourself this question.
The Hepatitis B vaccine is required for kids to attend public school in 47 states. But Hep B is spread through blood, sex, or sharing needles.
So why are babies getting it the day they’re born?
Ask a doctor and you’ll hear talking points like: “There could be an infected needle on the playground.”
There are zero documented cases of a child getting Hep B from a playground. Not one.
And mothers are screened for Hep B before birth—so if mom’s negative, there’s no risk to the baby. Yet they inject them anyway.
It gets worse.
The shot wears off by the time kids become teenagers—the only age where they might actually be at risk.
So what’s the real reason it’s given to newborns?
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