The current unknowns regarding โvaccinated bloodโ are being compared with the โRussian rouletteโ risks of HIV-tainted blood that was used for transfusions in the 1980s. And this 4-month-old has just set off a media firestorm.
STORY AT-A-GLANCE
- A growing number of people in need of blood transfusions are requesting blood that comes from people who havenโt received COVID-19 shots
- Pathologist Dr. Ryan Cole compared the current unknowns regarding โvaccinated bloodโ with HIV-tainted blood that was used for transfusions in the 1980s
- Directed donations and autologous donations, or self-donation, are options for receiving blood free of mRNA, but in both cases youโll need your doctor to submit a Red Cross Special Collections Order form
- A โSafe Bloodโ donation campaign has also been formed to match blood donors and recipients who have not had COVID-19 shots
Itโs unknown whether blood donated by people whoโve received mRNA COVID-19 shots poses a risk to those who receive it. A growing number of people arenโt willing to take any chances, however, and are requesting blood that comes from unvaccinated patients. One high-profile case involves a 4-month-old baby, Will Savage-Reeves, in New Zealand, who needs surgery for a heart valve disorder.
His parents, Samantha and Cole, requested the infant receive blood only from donors who have not received COVID-19 shots. While unvaccinated blood is available, the doctors and hospital refused to grant the request. The case was heard before a New Zealand court, which sided with the doctors and took guardianship of the child to proceed with the surgery using vaccinated blood.1,2
Hospital Refuses Familyโs Request for Unvaccinated Blood
The outcome of baby Willโs case may serve as a harbinger of things to come. The hospital argued that the surgery should proceed using vaccinated blood because of the importance of finding a quality match. A large pool of donor blood raises the possibility of finding the highest quality match.
In addition, according to Steve Kirsch, executive director of the Vaccine Safety Research Foundation, another of their arguments is, โIf there were a safety signal from using vaccinated blood for transfusions, it would have surfaced by now.โ They also want to keep up appearances, and allowing one patient to use unvaccinated blood may open the floodgates to others requesting the same. Kirsch noted:3
โIf they agree to use unvaccinated blood, it could be interpreted as an admission that vaccinated blood is not safe and could lead to everyone requesting unvaccinated blood which would then create severe blood shortages for a dubious benefit.โ
Further, the New Zealand Blood Service (NZBS) manages blood donations and collections in New Zealand. Only a specialist doctor can request directed donation for the baby to received unvaccinated blood.
But, Kirsch noted, โThe clinicians responsible for the surgery determined that there was insufficient evidence to make a special request โฆ The hospital cannot compel the NZBS to do what it says, e.g., even if the doctors agreed with the parents, NZBS can still refuse to supply the blood if it doesnโt think the request is justified.โ4
The hospital also claimed mRNA shots โto date remain safe.โ5 According to Kirsch, โThe court, lacking the legal and technical ability to second guess the doctors, therefore sided with the expert opinion of the doctors.โ6
The media, meanwhile, are painting the reasonable request to honor the precautionary principle as a conspiracy theory and disinformation dreamed up by fringe โanti-vaxxers.โ Case in point, The New York Times reported:7
โThe case, and the familyโs flawed scientific arguments, highlight the continuing dangers of online misinformation and conspiracist narratives, experts say. The dispute has โbecome a cause cรฉlรจbre in the most toxic way,โ prompting a spike in hate speech on fringe platforms where conspiracy theories run rife, said Sanjana Hattotuwa, a researcher at the Disinformation Project, a New Zealand monitoring group.โ
Not only did the New Zealand health service refuse the familyโs request, but New Zealandโs High Court granted two doctors authority to make medical decisions regarding baby Will.8 It didnโt need to go this far, supporters have stated, since there is ready availability of blood from unvaccinated donors.9
In a similar case in Italy, however, a judge also ruled against parents who requested blood transfusions only from unvaccinated donors be used during their 2-year-old sonโs heart surgery.10
Embalmers Find Unusual Clots in Veins Post-Shots
Richard Hirschman, a board-certified embalmer and funeral director with more than 20 years of experience, has come forward stating that, in the time period since COVID-19 shots were rolled out, starting around the middle of 2021, heโs been finding โstrange clotsโ in the bodies of the deceased.
โWhen I do the embalming, I have to go into the vein. And in order for the embalming process, I have to allow blood to be drained. So I actually pulled this huge, long clot โ fibrous looking clot โ out prior to an embalming,โ Hirschman said.11
The beginning of the clot, which resembles a white, rubbery worm, appears red and like a normal clot. But the majority of the clot is different: Itโs composed of a white, fibrous material. โIt just isnโt normal,โ he said, adding:12
โTypically, a blood clot is smooth; itโs blood that has coagulated together. But when you squeeze it, or touch it or try to pick it up, it generally falls apart โฆ you can almost squeeze it between your fingers and get it back to blood again. But this white fibrous stuff is pretty strong. Itโs not weak at all. You can manipulate it, itโs very pliable. Itโs not hard โฆ it is not normal. I donโt know how anybody can live with something like this inside of them.โ
Whatโs important to note is embalmers have reported finding unusual clots not only in deceased people whoโve received the shots but also in those who have had a blood transfusion. So while we donโt know what risk there is from receiving blood from someone whoโs had COVID-19 shots, โthe risk is not zero,โ Kirsch said.13
Another case involves a baby, Alexander, who received a vaccinated blood transfusion and developed โan enormous clot that eventually stretched from his left knee, all the way to his heart,โ and died.14ย According to Kirsch, the hospital then went on to delete all related medical records:15
โSacred Heart Hospital in Washington State has erased all records of the death of baby Alex who died from a blood clot after receiving a transfusion from a vaccinated patient. So there is no evidence of a problem anymore. They erased it, just like the CDC erased all data linking vaccines and autism. This is how science works nowadays.โ
Is the Blood Supply Safe? Nobody Knows
In the U.S., a person is in need of blood every two seconds.16 If you have a medical emergency, getting a blood transfusion can be life-saving. But should patients have the option of choosing to receive blood that hasnโt been exposed to mRNA COVID-19 shots?
The Red Cross states theyโre following the U.S. Food and Drug Administrationโs blood donation eligibility guidance, which states, โIn most cases, there is no deferral time for individuals who received a COVID-19 vaccine as long as they are symptom-free and feeling well at the time of donation.โ17
โWhile the antibodies that are produced by the stimulated immune system in response to vaccination are found throughout the bloodstream, the actual vaccine components are not,โ Jessa Merrill, Red Cross director of biomedical communications, told The Daily Beast.18ย Further, after speaking to Dr. Peter McCullough, cardiologist, internist and epidemiologist, Kirsch reported:19
โHe said heโd take the vaccinated blood because of the critical nature of the matching process. With donor blood, the match quality would not be as good because there is a smaller pool to draw from, and itโs not just blood type that is matched.
Nobody has quantified the risk of using vaccinated blood. He said if the risk were high, it would have been noticed by now (Iโm not sure I agree with that; there is a lot of willful blindness for anything associated with the vaccine).โ
Many Contracted AIDS Via Tainted Blood Transfusions
Pathologist Dr. Ryan Cole compared the current unknowns regarding โvaccinated bloodโ with HIV-tainted blood that was used for transfusions in the 1980s:20
โWe donโt know. Nobody knows. I have clots from unvaccinated deceased that were transfused and formed large clots post transfusion and died. No blood bank is checking. โOne cannot find, that for which they do not look.โ This is akin to blood banks and hemophiliacs and HIV in the 1980s. It may not be a problem.
However, it may be. There are assays academically available to check for circulating spike protein. It is criminal negligence to not assure the safety of the blood supply based on bureaucratic declarations without scientific explorations.โ
Similarly, in January 1983, after the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed evidence strongly suggesting blood and blood products transmitted AIDS and the disease was sexually transmitted, it recommended blood banks directly question donors about their sexual behavior and run blood donations through a series of screening tests.21
The blood bank community issued a statement soon after, stating โdirect or indirect questions about a donorโs sexual preference are inappropriateโ and not recommending any laboratory screening tests.22ย As noted by Encyclopedia.com:23
โIn fact, in the early years of the disease, many of the people who contracted AIDS were infected through blood transfusions. Because it took more than five years to develop a test to check for AIDS in blood before it was used in a transfusion, many people got the disease in hospitals.
The AIDS epidemic continued to grow in Africa and Asia during the 1990s and even in the early 21st century because many nations were slow to adopt blood testing.โ
In the 1980s, increasing fears over tainted transfusions led many people to say theyโd refuse donated blood entirely. One man, whose wife died of AIDS contracted through a contaminated transfusion, told the AP in 1985, โYou want to play Russian Roulette? Even if it were an emergency โ and I had some say in the matter โ I wouldnโt take blood out of the pool.โ24
Now, decades later, doctors are hearing similar concerns from patients regarding vaccinated blood. Dr. Davinder Sidhu, the division head for transfusion and transplant medicine for southern Alberta, Canada, told CTV News he gets requests for blood from unvaccinated donors โat least once or twice a month over the last several months.โ25
Is it Your Right to Receive โUnvaccinatedโ Blood?
As it stands, blood donation centers may ask about vaccines their donors have received,26 but itโs not guaranteed that this information will be passed on to consumers. The Red Cross also states, โIf youโve received a COVID-19 vaccine, youโll need to provide the manufacturer name when you come to donate.โ27
Still, itโs unlikely that most hospitals will readily divulge this information when it comes to receiving a blood transfusion. So what are your options if youโre looking for blood from a donor thatโs hasnโt received a COVID-19 shot? Directed donations, in which a donor donates blood for a specified receiver, are an option, but theyโre typically only used in cases where matched blood is unavailable due to extremely rare blood types.28
Autologous donations, or self-donation, is another option, in which you donate blood for your own use, such as before a medical procedure like surgery. In both cases, youโll need your doctor to submit a Red Cross Special Collections Order form to complete an autologous or directed blood donation.29
A โSafe Bloodโ donation campaign has also been formed to match blood donors and recipients who have not had COVID-19 shots. For now, theyโre acting as a resource to match donors with those in need of blood, but the hope is that an mRNA-free blood bank will be established:30
โThere is no blood bank with mRNA-free blood yet, not even with us. And, although we have already asked hundreds of clinics, at the moment โ at least in Europe โ all of them still refuse to allow the human right of free blood choice with them โ or at least do not want to be mentioned, because otherwise they fear reprisals. However, we promise you that we will not give up until we can offer a worldwide network of such clinics.โ
As for baby Will, whose parentsโ hopes for an mRNA-free blood transfusion have been dashed, Kirsch said:31
โWhatever happened to the precautionary principle of medicine? In my opinion, this isnโt a close call. We canโt know today if the blood supply is safe because nobody wants to even ask the question and do the experiments required to answer it. For that reason, Baby Willโs parentsโ request to use unvaccinated blood should be respected.โ
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Sources and References
- 1, 3, 13, 19 Substack, Steve Kirschโs newsletter December 3, 2022
- 2, 4, 5, 6, 8 Substack, Steve Kirschโs newsletter December 7, 2022
- 7, 9 The New York Times December 5, 2022
- 10 Independent February 8, 2022
- 11 Rumble, Dr. Jane Ruby Show January 26, 2022, 3:02
- 12 Rumble, Dr. Jane Ruby Show January 26, 2022, 4:23
- 14 GoFundMe, Support for Baby Alexander Bly
- 15, 20, 31 Substack, Steve Kirschโs newsletter December 4, 2022
- 16 American Red Cross, Importance of the Blood Supply
- 17, 27 Red Cross, When can I donate blood after receiving COVID-19 vaccine?
- 18 Business Insider August 21, 2021
- 21 HIV and the Blood Supply: An Analysis of Crisis Decisionmaking, 3. History of the Controversy, The CDCโs Public Meeting
- 22 HIV and the Blood Supply: An Analysis of Crisis Decisionmaking, 3. History of the Controversy, The Blood Bank Communityโs Response
- 23 Encyclopedia.com, Excerpt from โAnd the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic,โ 1987
- 24 AP March 1, 1985
- 25 CTV News October 14, 2022
- 26 Childrenโs Health Defense December 1, 2022
- 28 Vice November 15, 2022
- 29 Autologous and Directed Donations
- 30 Safe Blood Donation