whygetfat on Nostr: Jerm: "[…] I am now fairly skeptical of those interventions [vitamin K and the ...
Jerm: "[…] I am now fairly skeptical of those interventions [vitamin K and the early vaccines, for example]. Am I correct in that skepticism?"
Dr Stu: "You should be. Yes. Let's talk about a couple of things. First of all, the erythromycin eye goop. Women are screened for chlamydia and gonorrhea. If they don't have it, they don't need this eye goop in their eyes, which is an antibiotic. […] That's ridiculous to give to a woman who's got negative cultures or who has been having prenatal care. There's no reason to give the eye goop.
"Let's talk about hepatitis vaccine because that's an easy one. There's zero indication to give hepatitis vaccine unless a woman has hepatitis. And even then, the vaccine isn't going to help the baby. What they need is hepatitis B immunoglobulin, because the vaccine takes a while to work and the baby's going to be exposed to hepatitis at birth. All women are screened for hepatitis at pregnancy. Almost all women are negative, and yet they want to give the baby a vaccine for a disease that's sexually transmitted or passes through IV drug abuse, none of which I think your baby will be involved in in the first couple few years of its life.
"It is a money maker. They don't consider it to be a downside. It has 250mcg of aluminum in it. Aluminum is a toxin. There is no safe dose of a heavy metals in humans, let alone fetuses or newborns. So, the hepatitis vaccine is an absolute no, unless you have hepatitis.
"And the problem now with giving HBIG, which is hepatitis B immunoglobulin, is that it comes from pooled blood specimens. There's no way to know whether those pooled blood specimens were people that got the covid vaccine and end up putting spike protein into that. We've got a real problem now with our blood supply (and those sorts of things, e.g., RhoGAM transfusions). […]
"Vitamin K is a real interesting thing, because there is something called vitamin K deficiency bleeding, which is quite severe and can happen. But the incident of that happening is […] about one in 16,000. We're giving vitamin K to prevent something that happens one in 16,000. We're giving it intramuscularly, rather than subcutaneously or orally, when there's a black box warning on the package insert for vitamin K that said don't give it intramuscularly because it can cause anaphylactic reactions. […]
"If vitamin K is so important for babies, then how come babies are born vitamin K deficient? Wouldn't nature have figured out a way to give babies vitamin K? […] 15,999 babies don't get vitamin K deficiency bleeding and they are vitamin K deficient. Why are we giving them a shot to protect that one baby that might have something else wrong with it?
"Why are we giving them something that's going to thicken their clotting and increase their clotting, when maybe nature designed it so that in the first week or so of life, until the baby's gut starts to produce its own vitamin K through its own colonization of bacteria that a healthy mother's vaginal bacteria, maybe it's not supposed to be thickened. Maybe blood is supposed to flow thinner. Maybe it's supposed to flow into tiny little capillaries forming in the baby's brain and other parts of its body. And maybe that's why nature designed it that way."
Dr Stuart Fischbein with Jerm @ 47:41—51:47 (recorded in 2024, posted 2025-03-06) https://podbay.fm/p/jerm-warfare-the-battle-of-ideas/e/1741328385?t=2861
Dr Stu: "You should be. Yes. Let's talk about a couple of things. First of all, the erythromycin eye goop. Women are screened for chlamydia and gonorrhea. If they don't have it, they don't need this eye goop in their eyes, which is an antibiotic. […] That's ridiculous to give to a woman who's got negative cultures or who has been having prenatal care. There's no reason to give the eye goop.
"Let's talk about hepatitis vaccine because that's an easy one. There's zero indication to give hepatitis vaccine unless a woman has hepatitis. And even then, the vaccine isn't going to help the baby. What they need is hepatitis B immunoglobulin, because the vaccine takes a while to work and the baby's going to be exposed to hepatitis at birth. All women are screened for hepatitis at pregnancy. Almost all women are negative, and yet they want to give the baby a vaccine for a disease that's sexually transmitted or passes through IV drug abuse, none of which I think your baby will be involved in in the first couple few years of its life.
"It is a money maker. They don't consider it to be a downside. It has 250mcg of aluminum in it. Aluminum is a toxin. There is no safe dose of a heavy metals in humans, let alone fetuses or newborns. So, the hepatitis vaccine is an absolute no, unless you have hepatitis.
"And the problem now with giving HBIG, which is hepatitis B immunoglobulin, is that it comes from pooled blood specimens. There's no way to know whether those pooled blood specimens were people that got the covid vaccine and end up putting spike protein into that. We've got a real problem now with our blood supply (and those sorts of things, e.g., RhoGAM transfusions). […]
"Vitamin K is a real interesting thing, because there is something called vitamin K deficiency bleeding, which is quite severe and can happen. But the incident of that happening is […] about one in 16,000. We're giving vitamin K to prevent something that happens one in 16,000. We're giving it intramuscularly, rather than subcutaneously or orally, when there's a black box warning on the package insert for vitamin K that said don't give it intramuscularly because it can cause anaphylactic reactions. […]
"If vitamin K is so important for babies, then how come babies are born vitamin K deficient? Wouldn't nature have figured out a way to give babies vitamin K? […] 15,999 babies don't get vitamin K deficiency bleeding and they are vitamin K deficient. Why are we giving them a shot to protect that one baby that might have something else wrong with it?
"Why are we giving them something that's going to thicken their clotting and increase their clotting, when maybe nature designed it so that in the first week or so of life, until the baby's gut starts to produce its own vitamin K through its own colonization of bacteria that a healthy mother's vaginal bacteria, maybe it's not supposed to be thickened. Maybe blood is supposed to flow thinner. Maybe it's supposed to flow into tiny little capillaries forming in the baby's brain and other parts of its body. And maybe that's why nature designed it that way."
Dr Stuart Fischbein with Jerm @ 47:41—51:47 (recorded in 2024, posted 2025-03-06) https://podbay.fm/p/jerm-warfare-the-battle-of-ideas/e/1741328385?t=2861