A new study on the immune effects of Pfizer’s COVID-19 mRNA vaccine has scientists concerned over vaccine-acquired immune deficiencies in children and adults.

The new term “vaccine-acquired immune deficiency syndrome” (VAIDS) has been dubbed by scientists and health practitioners alike since the COVID-19 vaccine was approved back in 2020. Although VAIDS was not recognized as a medical condition at the time, experts now believe that COVID-19 vaccines may indeed impair or suppress immune responses.

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“Our findings suggest SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination could alter the immune response to other pathogens, which cause both vaccine-preventable and non-vaccine-preventable diseases,” the authors of the paper published in Frontiers in Immunology wrote.

Researchers from the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne, Australia tested blood samples from 29 children, both pre-vaccination and after two Pfizer mRNA doses.

Results revealed that blood samples post-vaccination showed lower cytokine response to non-COVID pathogens compared to pre-vaccination. Immune responses to COVID-19 proteins and nucleocapsid proteins remained high after vaccination.

“This is particularly relevant in children as they: have extensive exposure to microbes at daycare, school, and social occasions; are often encountering these microbes for the first time; and receive multiple vaccines as part of routine childhood vaccination schedules.”

Professor Retsef Levi, risk management and health systems specialist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, posted on X that the study “adds to cumulative evidence suggesting adverse immune alteration” by COVID-19 vaccination.

The study findings suggested “that repeat mRNA vaccine injections could predispose children to both viral and bacterial infections,” cardiovascular research expert and retired professor of medicine at Brown University Dr. Andrew Bostom told The Epoch Times.

READ: The Epoch Health full study explained.

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