On Australia's Mainstream Media 7News Former Australia Medical Association President

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On Australia's Mainstream Media 7News
Former Australia Medical Association President Professor Kerryn Phelps and her partner Jackie talks about vaccine side effects

Highlights
Professor Kerryn Phelps:
A week after I had the vaccine. Having never had any problems with my heart or my blood pressure ever, my blood pressure went extremely high, my pulse rate went extremely high. I woke in the night with my heart pounding, being able to hear my pulse in my ears, something called pulsatile tinnitus. I lost some hearing in my left ear. I went through a period of time where just walking across a room, my pulse rate would go up enormously. And that affected me terribly. And I became very breathless. I had a whole lot of investigations and nobody could really tell me what it was until I had testing for dysautonomia which is a problem of the nervous system and the way it interacts with the heart and the vascular system. And that is one of the recognition side effects of Pfizer.

Jackie:
I'm not an anti vaxxer. I've had anaphylaxis to foods before and I was really worried about an anaphylaxis. So we went along to the hospital where they had medical help, if I had anaphylaxis and they gave me the needle, within five minutes, my head nearly blew off my body. My face went bright red, my vision was impaired, I couldn't hear, my feet went numb, my hands went numb. I had paresthesia all over my body. And from that minute, my hair started falling out. I could hardly walk. For the next three years, it's three years on the 15 May this year since I had that Pfizer shot. It has ruined my life. It has made me hide away from people because my specialists have said if I catch COVID that'll be the end of me.

So I can't have any more vaccines and I wouldn't go near them with a ten foot barge pole.

It is neurological, rheumatological, it's caused ongoing problems for me.

Professor Kerryn Phelps:
There is so much to learn. There's an incredible lack of medical curiosity about investigating this. The TGA, take the reports. Apparently there have been 144,000 adverse reaction reports. But that's a drop in the ocean compared to the number of actual adverse reactions that there are, because a lot of them aren't being reported, because certainly in the early days, they weren't being recognised. So there is so much that needs to happen to engage with people who have suffered vaccine injuries and for us.

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