A draft alert to state and local health officials warning of a possible connection between rising myocarditis cases and COVID-19 vaccines was pulled by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) before it could be sent. The alert addressed evidence tying heart inflammation to two of the mRNA vaccines manufactured by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, according to documents obtained by the Epoch Times.
The CDC utilizes the Health Alert Network (HAN) to push important alerts and notices to state and local health agencies, hospitals, and doctors across the country. An email from bondage-obsessed Dr. Demetre Daskalakis in May 2021 revealed the existence of the draft HAN alert. “This is the most recent draft of an alert as discussed. Happy to discuss,” the doctor wrote to two other senior CDC colleagues, Drs. Henry Walke and John Brooks, with the email’s subject line reading: “draft alert on myocarditis and mRNA vaccines.”
However, a spokesman for the three doctors said instead of sending the HAN notice, however, CDC officials decided to include the information in the draft alert as part of a May 2021 CDC ‘clinical consideration’ guidance document. “The clinical consideration reached the provider audience as the HAN would have,” the spokesperson said.
Just one month before the CDC shelved the draft alert addressing concerns over rising myocarditis cases, the government agency used the HAN system to distribute a notice regarding connections between the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and blood clotting and low platelet levels in some patients. Some health professionals say this points to a double standard.
In a recent interview, California epidemiologist Dr. Tracy Hoeg questioned the disparate treatment of the two alerts: “Why would they issue one for the J&J vaccine for the blood clots but not for myocarditis post-mRNA vaccination?”