Key doctor behind Mexico’s COVID-19 vaccine drive 'dies suddenly'
Dr. Alfredo Victoria Moreno, one of the key figures behind Mexico’s COVID-19 vaccination campaign, died suddenly last week from a heart attack at age 42.
Victoria, an epidemiologist who described himself as a “COVID-19 fighter” and “vaccination expert” in his Twitter bio, previously served as a director in the Red Cross and an advisor within Mexico’s Health Ministry. An aggressive promoter of vaccines, Victoria appeared several times on Mexico Today and on Hoy! where he would inject people live on television with the COVID-19 shots. He urged his large social media following to take the injections and managed the website provaccines.com, according to Slay News.
Articles on Victoria’s website refer to cheap, effective early treatments for COVID-19 like ivermectin as “ridiculous” and “nonsense,” offering vaccines as the sole cure for the virus.
On Monday June 26, Victoria failed to wake up. Hoy! anchor Raúl Araiza reported that the physician died of natural causes.
"Well, we want to inform you that . . . obviously it shocks us all as a team because you are creating bonds and affection . . . our very highly esteemed collaborator, Dr. Alfredo Victoria Moreno, died of natural causes, it seems,” reported Araiza.
Mexican media later reported that Dr. Victoria died of a myocardial infarction, a condition which has been increasingly affecting young, healthy people since the COVID-19 shots were introduced.
A peer-reviewed study from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) last year found that a 25% increase in cardiovascular events among healthy people under 40 is correlated to the COVID-19 shot.
In media newspeak, however, sudden deaths like Dr. Victoria’s are considered Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS). Media operatives began reporting on SADS last year to explain sudden deaths among young, healthy people that are baffling doctors. The deaths occur most commonly in people under 40 and usually are due to cardiac arrest.
“Healthy young people are dying suddenly and unexpectedly from a mysterious syndrome - as doctors seek answers through a new national register,” wrote the Daily Mail.
“’SADS is an 'umbrella term to describe unexpected deaths in young people',’” it continued, quoting from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners.
The British Heart Foundation defines SADS as “when someone dies suddenly and unexpectedly from a cardiac arrest, but the cause of the cardiac arrest can’t be found.”
In March, for example, the cause of death for a young flight attendant who died suddenly shortly after landing was determined by the coroner to be Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS). Greta Dyrmishi, 24, was working as a cabin crew member for an Air Albania flight from Tirana to Essex, UK on December 21st. As the plane landed at Stansted Airport, Dyrmishi suddenly fainted. Paramedics were unable to revive her, and ten minutes later she lost her pulse. She was pronounced dead at the scene. Essex Coroner Michelle Brown revealed the cause to be “sudden adult death syndrome (SADS)”.