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by BoHerfVJrEsq 1727 days ago
Suppose I go to the hospital with a stubbed toe. They test me with PCR and the test detects fragments of dead inactive virus from a month ago when my immune system defeated it. I therefore test "positive" for COVID. They give me the vaccine, which promptly kills me from a combination of stroke, heart attack, and multiple organ failure. This would be recorded as a COVID death, and I would be considered "unvaccinated". Cheating like this is a big part of why the COVID death toll is as high as it is. It's fiction.
2 comments

Adverse reactions to viral vaccines are coded differently compared to COVID being an underlying cause: https://www.codingclinicadvisor.com/sites/default/files/Freq...

It's recommended that people wait a few weeks after recovering before getting the COVID vaccine, so they probably wouldn't offer it to you immediately in the hospital if you tested positive: https://www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2...

That's quite the claim to make. I'd love to see the verified examples you have to back it up as well as statistics on how often that happens so we can adjust the reported values to get the true number of deaths.

But I'm not going to hold my breath on you being able to actually support your statement.

What’d he claim that’s wrong?

CDC regards as unvaccinated until 2 weeks post treatment. So any acute vaccine reaction is regarded as an unvaccinated hospitalization.

> That's quite the claim to make.

Is it? What do you imagine would prevent it from happening just like I suggested? Can PCR tell the difference between live virus that's causing illness and dead virus fragments? Do the mRNA vaccines cause spike proteins to protrude out from the normally smooth walls of blood vessels, causing clotting as confirmed by D-dimer tests? Does it take 14 days for a person to be considered vaccinated after getting the jab?