The WHO issued a warning regarding an โunusual surgeโ of myocarditis cases in babies that were born within the United Kingdom.
The increase in myocarditis has been dramatic. A hospital in the South Wales region reported only one myocarditis case in infants and newborns over the past six years.
However, over a span of less than a year, between June 2022 and April 2023, โten babies under 28 days of age presented with symptoms of myocarditisโ at that same hospital.
โI know what youโre thinking at this point,โ said Epoch Times host Roman Balmakov. โWhat could have possibly led to this increase in myocarditis cases in babies during the years 2022 to 2023? Could it have anything to do with the large-scale push to get everyone in the country, including pregnant women, fully vaccinated?โ
The World Health Organization (WHO) suspects that the enterovirus could be the cause of this troubling rise in myocarditis rates. However, they recognize that occurrences of myocarditis due to this virus are typically โrare.โ
It remains puzzling as to why the WHO is not considering or pursuing an inquiry into whether the experimental vaccine, which has been administered to millions of pregnant women, might potentially be linked to this troubling trend.
The Pfizer Documents detail that โtransplacentalโ exposure to the vaccine can and does happen.
Perhaps the WHO should take a closer look and investigate if this disturbing phenomenon has anything to do with the sudden rise in myocarditis rates among newborns in the UK.
The full video covering this topic, as well as pro basketball player Oscar Cabrera Adamesโs death, is available in the link below:
Pro Basketball Player Blames mRNA Vaccine for Myocarditis, Dies of Heart Attack
๐๐๐๐ฅ๐ ๐๐ก๐: โUnusual Surgeโ in Severe Myocarditis Cases Strikes Newborns and Infants in the UK