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Talking today about the success with early home treatment for Covid-19 and the questions everyone is asking: What about the Covid vaccines? How effective are they? How safe are they? What are the risks we know? Who should consider the vaccine? If you have had Covid or have antibodies already, should you take the vaccine or not? What are the key differences between the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines and the newly approved J&J vaccine? The void of real information and truthful answers for your families is in short supply in today’s media and public venues. The good news is, Dr. Peter McCullough joins guest host DrLee4America on The Voice of a Nation today with an abundance of answers to help guide you at this critical juncture.
Dr. Peter McCullough is an academic internist and cardiologist from Dallas, Texas. He has been a leader in the pandemic response to the Covid-19 disaster and has published the first guidance for the medical treatment of ambulatory patients. Dr. McCullough was also the expert witness testifying on early home-based treatment before the Senate Oversight Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs, chaired by Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin.
- What’s the difference between these experimental vaccines and the usual Flu vaccine? How effective are they?
- How safe are they? Have there been any deaths?
- What about adverse reactions – how do these new Covid vaccines compare with the normal flu vaccine?
- What groups of people were EXCLUDED in the clinical trials? Are those people being given the vaccine anyway?
- If you have had Covid or have antibodies already, should you take the vaccine or not?
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