Thank you for the link. I am totally shocked that it was published on the NIH website. No matter the rate of adverse reactions including death, the "experts" with rare exception have one response, if they ever acknowledge adverse events in the first place: correlation does not equal causation. Then they tell you to follow the CDC guidelines.
Thank you for the link. I am totally shocked that it was published on the NIH website. No matter the rate of adverse reactions including death, the "experts" with rare exception have one response, if they ever acknowledge adverse events in the first place: correlation does not equal causation. Then they tell you to follow the CDC guidelines.
Thank you for the link. I am totally shocked that it was published on the NIH website. No matter the rate of adverse reactions including death, the "experts" with rare exception have one response, if they ever acknowledge adverse events in the first place: correlation does not equal causation. Then they tell you to follow the CDC guidelines.
Melissa, it's not "the NIH website," it's an online repository of published medical literature, hosted on an NIH website.