The health service of New Zealand is attempting to obtain temporary guardianship of a baby after his parents refused to allow blood from vaccinated individuals to be used in his heart surgery.
The parents of a four-month-old boy said in a Monday interview with Kiwi broadcaster Liz Gunn that their son was diagnosed with severe pulmonary valve stenosis, a condition where the pulmonary valve is too narrow, causing the right ventricle to pump harder to send blood out to the lungs. This can cause the right ventricle to thicken and strain the heart.
The boy needs open-heart surgery to allow blood to flow properly around his body; however, his father said that the parents were “extremely concerned” with the blood used by the doctors, adding that they “don’t want blood that is tainted by vaccination.”
“That’s the end of the deal — we are fine with anything else these doctors want to do,” he said in the interview.
While more than 20 unvaccinated donors were willing to help, the New Zealand Blood Service had not approved such action, the parents said in the video. They also brought the concern to a doctor and a surgeon both of whom disregarded the concerns.
The New Zealand Blood Service’s website says that blood from vaccinated and unvaccinated donors are not held separately, though anyone meeting the donor eligibility criteria can donate regardless of vaccination status.
Health New Zealand filed a request in the Auckland high court on Monday, asking to strip guardianship of the baby away from the parents, citing the Care of Children Act. This would allow consent to be given to use donated blood from the vaccinated, according to the NZ Herald.
Health New Zealand’s Auckland interim district director Dr. Mike Shepherd said in a statement that this type of decision “is always made with the best interests of the child in mind and following extensive conversations with whānau,” the Maori word for extended family.
Justice Layne Harvey set a hearing date of Dec. 6 after the matter was brought to the high court in Auckland on Wednesday, but the family’s lawyer, Sue Grey, told the court, “where there’s a solution, that would be really a shame that that solution be missed.”
“The ideal outcome would be that the blood bank would agree to collect blood from these donors and put it aside ready for this baby to have the operation that he needs,” she told Newshub.
The mother, meanwhile, said that having safe blood was “our right as a mother and as my voice for my baby.”
“There is no evidence that previous vaccination affects the quality of blood for transfusion,” the New Zealand Blood Service’s website says. “Any COVID-19 vaccine in the blood is broken down soon after the injection. All donated blood also gets filtered during processing, so any trace amounts that may still be present poses no risk to recipients.”
They also denied any risks associated with spike proteins in blood transfusion, saying that it is present in “vanishingly small quantities in the blood in some people for the first two weeks after their mRNA vaccine,” adding, “The chance of finding spike protein in donated blood is very small, and it will be in the picogram range if it is there at all. It is not found in the blood after this time period has passed.”
However, the German Working Group for COVID Vaccine Analysis, an international network of more than 60 scientists, recently discovered the vaccines may have more abnormalities than have been previously admitted.
A report released earlier this year was presented before the World Council for Health General Assembly. GWG analyzed the blood of vaccinated individuals, comparing it to blood samples from unvaccinated individuals.
They found that every vaccinated patient’s blood, particularly those having either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, presented “novel structures” such as rectangular crystals and spirals, structures that “have never been found in human blood before.”
In addition to comparing the blood of vaccinated and unvaccinated people, GWG researchers examined various vaccine vials. They found relatively large metallic foreign bodies existing in the blood of vaccinated people.
Among these metallic foreign bodies were elements from across the periodic table, including:
Alkali metals: caesium (Cs), potassium (K)
Alkaline earth metals: calcium (Ca), barium (Ba)
Transition metals: cobalt (Co), iron (Fe), chromium (Cr), titanium (Ti)
Rare earth metals: cerium (Ce), gadolinium (Gd)
Mining group/metal: aluminum (Al)
Carbon group: silicon (Si) (partly support material/slide)
Oxygen group: sulphur (S)
These elements “are visible under the dark-field microscope as distinctive and complex structures of different sizes, can only partially be explained as a result of crystallization or decomposition processes, [and] cannot be explained as contamination from the manufacturing process,” the researchers found.
“If you filter a substance that is to be injected properly, you shouldn’t see anything under the microscope,” said microbiologist and GWG expert Sabine Stebel in her presentation before the WCHGA. “These structures are definitely too big to be injected into a living person.”
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