Benjamin
The Living Force
Not sure if something similar has been posted yet, but there's an update on the hepatitis cases in children in a new article out yesterday in the DailyMail; 3 children in Indonesia have died, and they still have yet to identify the cause, however there are some points of note:
- if it's adenovirus, it's not one of the usual ones. 'The WHO reported adenovirus has been detected in at least 74 of the cases. At least 20 of the children tested positive for the coronavirus.'
- in the UK it's mostly children under 5 years old
- 'has been spotted in more than 200 children aged between one month and 16 years old. *cases in Canada, Japan, and Illinois, Wisconsin and New York are still yet to be confirmed'
- 18 children have had liver transplants
- 'Other scientists said it may have been the adenovirus that has acquired 'unusual mutations'.
- they claim Indonesia didn't lockdown like the rest of the planet (it did, just not nationally); but then neither did Sweden. Could it be that less children died in the UK/West, as one example, because the emergency healthcare was 'better' (at least in those severe cases)
- adenovirus circulates all year but peaks in late winter and spring; i.e. now
- adenovirus is used in a number of the jabs
- Covid jabs can cause hepatitis: 'Immune-mediated hepatitis with the Moderna vaccine, no longer a coincidence but confirmed'
- 'covid antibodies' can be passed through breast milk (or other bodily fluids?)
- hepatitis can be passed through breast milk (or other bodily fluids)
- in some instances there were outbreaks in clusters, could this be batch related - either through a bad batch OR because they extended the 'use before date' on batches? Or is it related to the genetics (although cases were detected all over the globe)
Just to mention, the article that Chad quoted was from May 3.
Spain sounds alarm over mysterious hepatitis in children
Worldwide, some 650 cases of acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology have been reported, WHO figures show
May 30, 2022
Spain has registered 30 cases of acute hepatitis of unknown origins since the beginning of this year, a fresh situation report from the country’s Health Ministry shows.
The mysterious illness has primarily affected young children, with 24 of the patients aged 10 and below. None of the patients are related to each other, the ministry noted, with no epidemiological links established between the cases.
“It is necessary to continue intensive monitoring and continue investigations carried out to confirm or rule out whether there is an increase in cases of unknown hepatitis compared to what is expected,” the ministry noted on Friday, admitting that it was still unclear whether the cases surpassed its usual baseline or not.
The first patient had shown symptoms on January 2, according to the situation report. The finding suggests that the illness actually surfaced well before early April, when cases of acute hepatitis were reported by multiple, primarily European, countries, as well as by the US.
According to the latest figures by the World Health Organization (WHO), some 650 suspected cases of the illness in children have been reported between April 5 and May 26. A further 99 cases are under investigation.
The acute hepatitis has been detected so far in 33 countries, the UN health watchdog noted, adding that scientists worldwide still have not established its causes.
“The aetiology of this severe acute hepatitis remains unknown and under investigation; the cases are more clinically severe and a higher proportion develops acute liver failure compared with previous reports of acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology in children,” the WHO said on Friday.
The watchdog urged its members to ramp up research into the hepatitis’ nature and causes, noting that it remains unclear whether the number of reported cases is abnormal or remains within the usual baseline.
“Member States are strongly encouraged to identify, investigate and report potential cases fitting the case definition above,” the WHO said. “Whole blood, serum, urine, stool, respiratory and liver biopsy (if available) samples should be undertaken for all cases meeting the case definition.”
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