German chemistry professors have sent a letter to the Paul Ehrlich Institute (PEI), an agency of the German Federal Ministry of Health, writing that “the problems of mRNA-based vaccines are becoming increasingly obvious” and asking the institute to investigate such vaccines further and put a stop to them.
Citing a December 2023 report in Nature, which found unwanted proteins in patients who received modified mRNA vaccines (modRNA), the professors called on the PEI to “draw consequences from all of these listed facts and finally stop this modRNA technology.” The Nature study is “one of a series of worrying developments surrounding the approval of these modRNA substances,” they wrote.
The professors — Jörg Matysik, Professor of Analytical Chemistry at the University of Leipzig; Gerald Dyker, Professor of Organic Chemistry at the Ruhr University Bochum; Andreas Schnepf, Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Tübingen; and Martin Winkler, Professor Materials and Process Engineering at the Zurich University of Applied Sciences — also authored a January 2022 letter to BioNTech founder Ugur Sahin requesting information about possible problems in the production process of Covid mRNA vaccines.
The mRNA vaccines used against COVID-19 are coming under increasing scrutiny. They have been linked to myocarditis, and a recent study by Turkish scientists discovered that the offspring of rats that received the Pfizer mRNA vaccine exhibited “autism-like” symptoms.