On 2021-07-05 12:35, Jan Whitaker wrote:
> Interesting! Someone who I think was a nurse, can't remember who, was 
> appalled that the injections were NOT being pulled back to be sure there was 
> no blood. They were watching the endless TV videos of injections being given. 
> From this article, it seems they were on to something.

As was my Partner, a highly qualified (but now retired) Paediatric Nurse.  She 
observed months ago that people videoed while doing vaccinations rarely pulled 
back but she was trained to _always_ do so.  It seems the practice now is to 
inject into shoulder muscle where the chance of hitting a blood vessel is "very 
low" rather than further down (i.e. closer to  the elbow), and it's "difficult" 
to pull back with fine needles now used.

And many thanks, Kim, for that reference.  I've been doing a little amateur 
research on the AZ clotting problem, partly because I have an ongoing interest 
in medical matters but mainly because of a possible susceptibility to HIT-like 
reactions.  I haven't read your reference yet, but have wondered for some time 
whether the mechanisms involved in HIT are similar, especially regarding the 
formation of haptens and subsequent development of of an auto-immune condition 
where the immune system cleans up its' own platelets.  I presume this may or 
may not result in a noticeable thrombosis, but it's likely to place extra load 
on the kidneys.

David Lochrin


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