What Parents-to-Be Need to Know About the COVID Vaccine
Moms Across America risks social media censorship and the loss of sponsorship funding by sharing this information with you. We may need to cut staff and be limited in our effectiveness in the area of increasing access to organic food, safe environments, schools, and communities due to that loss of funding.
We sincerely hope, however, that our funders and the media will see that the life of all babies is more important than restricting our sharing of information that simply empowers a person to choose the care for their families.
When we learn of the tragic loss of the precious babies in our communities, we cannot sit idly by in fear. We must take action. And we hope you will too.
Read moreCDC Decides Who Gets The COVID Vaccine First
On Tuesday December 1, 2020, the CDC's ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON IMMUNIZATION PRACTICES (ACIP) meeting was held to vote on Phase 1a of the COVID vaccine rollout. The meeting was live streamed and was able to be viewed by the public. I watched the presentation for nearly 4 hours to witness the process in which crucial decisions like this are made and relay the information to Moms Across America supporters. Our moms are keenly interested in the topic of vaccines, as many of our children are vaccine damaged and we want to prevent further damage to others. We know first-hand how intense the struggle from the multitude of side effects can be for our elderly parents or family members, how devastating the loss of mobility or speech is, and how tragic it is to have our children’s potential for the future robbed from them. We are very concerned about the first group of people to get this rushed and risky vaccine, especially essential health care workers and our beloved, and most vulnerable parents, grandparents and family members.
Who Should Get the COVID Vaccine First?
Doctors, scientists, and heads of departments such as the CDC, FDA, NIH, HHS, and many other immunization management groups were present. It was a meeting of the minds of the people who control the immunization schedule of the United States of America, 350 million people. The context was set early, “Every minute a person in the United States is dying from COVID...as we have this meeting at least 180 people will die.” The goal on the agenda was to vote on whether or not health care providers and residents of long-term care facilities should be the first to be offered the COVID vaccine, after it was approved by the CDC and ACIP.
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