In my March 26, 2022 Newsletter, “BELL'S PALSY IN VACCINATED CHILDREN: A RISK NOT MEASURABLE IN THE UNVACCINATED”, I wrote:
“While the exact cause(s) of Bell’s palsy are unknown, viral (e.g., herpes zoster virus) and immune disorders are frequently implicated as a cause for this disorder. According to the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD), Bell’s palsy strikes between 25 and 35 people per 100,000 of population (0.025%-0.035%). The NIH tells us that those between 15- to 45 years old are most at risk and that risk factors for Bell’s palsy include pregnancy, preeclampsia, obesity, hypertension, diabetes, and upper respiratory ailments.”
A deeper search for more precise information on the prevalence of Bell’s Palsy in children returned only this: “There is no gender or racial preference, and palsy can occur at any age, but more cases are seen in mid and late-life with the MEDIAN AGE OF ONSET AT 40 YEARS.” (emphasis added)
I was not able to find anything in the primary literature other than an occasional case series of a few hundred patients over a period of several years. None of those reports address Bell’s palsy in children.
Despite an occasional statement to the contrary (unsupported by data), Bell’s palsy in children is extremely rare and mostly idiopathic. Bell’s palsy in children is almost unheard of. In fact, there are no epidemiological reports of its prevalence in children. No agency or organization is keeping statistics on its occurrence or its etiology — but VAERS does.
As I wrote on March 26th:
”OpenVAERS contains 44,293 total Adverse Event Reports pertaining to children ages 5-17 who received one or more inoculations with one of the SARS-CoV-2 “vaccines”. Those 101 reports of Bell’s palsy associated with those inoculations represents 0.22% of all reports in children.”
That 0.22% is TEN times the prevalence reported in the entire U.S. population. IF there was no relationship between the “vaccine” and Bell’s palsy in children there should be virtually no reports of Bell’s palsy in “vaccinated” children.
And THAT Ladies and Gentlemen, is all that we need to know.
There is no other explanation for Bell’s Palsy in any of these children. None. They were jabbed with a mysterious, “novel vaccine” and within 1 or more days they developed Bell’s palsy. Period. Until CDC 1) releases all the data and 2) provides the number of children who have been “vaccinated” (stratified by age group) which would alter that conclusion, that’s my story and I'm sticking to it.
But CDC is not going to release all the data. CDC is going to continue to withhold it and obscure it for purely political reasons. Reporting SARS-CoV-2 “vaccinations” as a function of the number of doses loosely stratified by age and not by the number of children who received one dose and the number who received two doses (stratified by age) makes the epidemiology impossible. But the fact that Bell’s palsy exists at all among “vaccinated” children is enough.
Given that CDC’s own data demonstrates that there is no difference in the prevalence of COVID-19 between vaccinated and unvaccinated children, any suggestion that any adverse outcome is rare and mild and easily recovered from is a misdirection intended to obscure the truth and the truth is this mRNA preparation is harming children at an alarming rate. Any physician or public health official who insists that any child should receive this mRNA nightmare should be charged with malpractice and subject to inquiry by the AMA or state licensure boards.
But until we demand that this attack on our children stop — it will continue.
My Constant Caveat
VAERS is under reported a substantial amount. whether one uses Jessica Rose’s “humble estimate” of 31 or Steve Kirsch’s estimate of 41 or the estimate of Rob Lazarus of 100 is at the moment irrelevant. What is relevant is that the true number of cases of Bell’s palsy in “vaccinated” children lies somewhere between 3,131 and 10,100 OR greater since CDC has withheld a substantial amount of data. Reflect on that and remember that the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD) estimates that there are only 40,000 cases across all age groups in the United States each year — the vast majority of which occur among those over 17 years of age.
Non-vaccine related Bell’s palsy in children under the age of 17 is almost unheard of. It is not common. It is rare among the rare.
”For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope.” Jeremiah 29:11
Union, KY
28 March 2022
My older brother suffered Bell's palsy for 6 months +- when he was in grade school, 1960's. I don't believe anyone knew at the time why it occurred. Recently I have wondered whether it was vaccine-induced, but we didn't get anywhere near the number of vaccines then as now.