Severe menstrual bleeding after exposure to COVID vaxxed people confirmed in new study
Shedding: The CDC still denies that it can happen with the COVID shots, but thousands of people tell a different story of how merely being near to someone who was injected produces symptoms in them. Now a new study suggests that shedding, the release of particles from people who have been infected or injected, is real. Perhaps the real news is that the study has actually been published.
'I didn't get the shot — the shot got me'
The study appears in the International Journal of Vaccine Theory, Practice, and Research and is titled, “Menstrual Abnormalities Strongly Associated with Proximity to COVID-19 Vaccinated Individuals.” Gynecological disorders are by far the most common symptoms described by those who say they have suffered from shedding related to the COVID shots. In 2021, MyCycleStory launched an online survey to investigate women's symptoms in relation to the shots.
Over 6,000 women responded, almost all of whom had regular cycles prior to the roll-out of the shots — including throughout the first year of COVID in 2020. One of the striking features of the survey was that out of all the 6,049 respondents, 3,390 were unvaccinated and never had a confirmed COVID infection, yet they described symptoms very similar to those who either took the shots or tested positive for COVID.
Of those women who had neither a shot nor a COVID infection, and who reported having been within six feet of someone who did have the shots, 71.7 percent had irregular menstrual symptoms within a week of the exposure and just over half (50.1 percent) had irregular menstrual symptoms within three days of the exposure.
Strangers more dangerous than husbands and children
The type of exposure seemed to make a difference, although not the type of difference the study’s authors expected. They predicted, before analyzing the results, that closer proximity to vaccinated people would result in more severe and/or frequent symptoms, but what they found was that daily exposure (within six feet) to people from outside the person’s household was far more likely to produce symptoms than living with vaccinated household members, even on an intimate basis.
The study’s authors suggested that one reason for this unexpected finding might be that exposure to a range of shedders was more harmful than exposure to one or a few shedders:
One possible explanation for this result is that daily exposure to a larger public group of vaccinated individuals could increase the concentration and duration of exposure to vaccine components being transmitted in the environment.
When statistics don't tell the whole story
The types of symptoms included heavier bleeding, lengthier bleeding (lasting over seven days), and significantly shorter cycles — over seven days shorter than before the roll-out of the shots.
Shedding can end marriages
While these may sound like mild, non-life-changing symptoms, detailed accounts of what women experience soon correct this impression. “Heavier” bleeding is sometimes so profuse that women become anemic and need blood transfusions, as one woman described:
My husband got the shots without telling me. I started to get violent headaches every time he came near me. Weeks later I started bleeding profusely. The bleeding never stopped (three weeks of heavy bleeding — please note I have never in my entire life had period problems) until I had to be rushed to the emergency [room] where they tried to force me to have a blood transfusion as my hemoglobin levels were so low they didn't think I was going to last the night. I refused as they couldn't guarantee that it was unvaccinated blood.
I asked for an iron infusion, knowing it would build my hemoglobin levels back slowly, a longer but safer solution. I took drugs to stop the bleeding.
In this particular case, the reaction was so extreme that the couple divorced:
I separated from my husband due to this issue as I could never be near him again without getting sick.
Should it be called menstruation at all?
Other women pass huge clots and experience terrible cramping, which is frightening as well as painful:
I am a caregiver to families who have been vaccinated. Until May of 2022, this did not seem to be affecting me much. Then suddenly I got my period that month and BLED. It was not the kind of light, predictable bleeding that I have always experienced. It was the kind of bleeding I would compare to a cut vein, where I could barely move from the shower to my clothes, or from seated to standing, without making a mess. Tampons would be soaked pretty much immediately and it was scaring me; it had never happened before.
On the second evening of this, I stood up and felt a gush so I went to the bathroom where I discovered a frightening mass that looked like a clot the size of my fist, or what I would guess resembled a miscarriage.
A once vanishingly-rare phenomenon now no longer rare
One side-effect of the COVID shots which has also been linked to shedding is decidual cast shedding, which is the loss, in one piece, of the entire lining of the uterus. This was once such a rare occurrence that there are less than 40 documented cases of it in the entire medical literature — that is, prior to the COVID shots.
292 women (almost 5 percent of respondents) who responded to the survey reported that they had experienced decidual cast shedding. Of these 292, 277 had not received a COVID shot but they had been in close proximity to people who had.
Two months after my husband got the shot, I experienced decidual cast shedding. It's a very scary experience. I have been poked and probed by all the mainstream medicine doctors here and they have found nothing wrong with me but they “guarantee that my problems have nothing to do with shedding or spike proteins.”
Months-long 'periods'
Many women experience longer bleeding lasting over seven days. Others bleed for weeks — or months:
Didn’t take the COVID shot at all, but last year I was bleeding non-stop for five months; it was in August-December. Then this year I only had my period for about four months. Everyone I know around me is fully vaxxed and has the boosters.
Bleeding in young girls...
Gynecological problems have also been experienced by people who were not menstruating prior to their exposure to people who had the shots — both young children and post-menopausal women:
My ten-year-old came back from a five-day visit with family after they had been freshly boosted and got her period for the first time. She had a lot of discharge that was odd and it was very clot-heavy. She had two more 28-day cycles after this and then no more cycles. This made me suspicious that her bleeding might not be her natural expression.
After another cycle had passed with no bleeding or discharge, she again went for a long weekend visit with her grandparents and they attended a large family reunion where everybody was vaxxed and boosted. Again upon returning home she got her period that cycle with a lot of heavy discharge and clotting.
... and in older women
What is called “breakthrough bleeding” can be especially alarming to women as it is sometimes a sign of cancer. Both women on drugs designed to stop menstruation and those past menopause have experienced unexpected bleeding following both the shots and being in close proximity to people who got them:
My three female cousins came for a four-day visit. They were all double vaccinated with Pfizer. Shortly after they left, within a week, I had a bright red period. It lasted seven days. I’m 52. I’m in menopause. I haven’t had a period in five years. I went to my doctor just to be sure nothing was suspect. I was almost embarrassed to tell her I’ve heard of such things but didn’t necessarily believe them. She said she had already seen five other women with similar stories.
Menstrual abnormalities following receipt of the COVID shots have long been acknowledged by the medical profession, although many doctors continue to insist that the problems are minor and very temporary. Fortunately, there are treatments that have been effective in many cases, both for those who have been injected and for those who have been exposed second-hand to mRNA products. Part two of this article will detail several possible treatments and expand on the notion of shedding and the response of the medical profession.
Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is for educational and information purposes only and is not intended as health, medical, financial, or legal advice. Always consult a physician, lawyer, or other qualified professional regarding any questions you may have about a medical condition, health objectives or legal or financial issues.