by Lance D Johnson at Natural News
- A preschool-aged child participating in Moderna’s KidCOVE clinical trial for a COVID-19 booster died of cardio-respiratory arrest, prompting debates about transparency and accountability.
- The FDA has not disclosed the death to the American public, raising concerns about the safety of mRNA vaccines for children and the integrity of the regulatory process.
- Moderna reported the death to European regulatory authorities but has not published the trial results on ClinicalTrials.gov as required by law.
- Journalist Alex Berenson is pressing the FDA for answers, questioning whether the agency knew about the death and why it has not been disclosed.
- The incident has intensified concerns about potential side effects of mRNA vaccines, particularly myocarditis, and the importance of transparency in clinical trials.
In late 2022 or early 2023, a preschool-aged child enrolled in Moderna’s KidCOVE clinical trial for a COVID-19 booster died of cardio-respiratory arrest. The death, which Moderna reported to European regulatory authorities but not to the U.S. public, has sparked a heated debate about transparency, accountability, and the ethical responsibilities of pharmaceutical companies and federal health agencies.
Journalist Alex Berenson, a former New York Times reporter, has raised critical questions about whether the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) knew about the death and why it has not been disclosed to the American public. As the FDA remains silent, concerns grow about the safety of mRNA vaccines for children and the integrity of the regulatory process.
The death of child in a vaccine clinical trial and its aftermath
The child, whose exact age was not disclosed, was part of Moderna’s KidCOVE trial, which tested the company’s mRNA-1273.214 booster, designed to target an early Omicron variant of COVID-19. According to Moderna’s report to the European Union’s Clinical Trials Register, the death was recorded as unrelated to the vaccine. However, the company has yet to publish the trial results on ClinicalTrials.gov, a U.S. government website where drug makers are legally required to report such data.
Berenson, who now writes for his Substack publication Unreported Truths,…
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