10% of Americans Regret Taking COVID Vaccine

Ten percent of Americans who received the COVID-19 vaccine regret
having done so, according to a recent poll. In addition, 15 percent
of the 1,038 adults (https://bit.ly/3P7aJFw) that took the survey
said that they have been diagnosed with a new condition by
a medical practitioner, weeks or months after taking the vaccine.
Children’s Health Defense (CHD) commissioned (https://bit.ly/3BNzZO4)
the poll two years after the inception of Operation Warp Speed in
order to find out about people’s position on the COVID vaccines and
their health.
The poll, conducted by Zogby Analytics, states that the margin of
error is +/- 3.1 percentage points.
"The fact that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
reports more than 232 million Americans ages 18–65 have taken at
least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, and 15 percent of those
surveyed report a newly diagnosed condition is concerning and needs
further study," said Laura Bono, CHD’s executive director.
"The mRNA vaccine technology is new and clinical trials naturally
have no long-term data. CHD believes this survey points to the need
for further study."
Sixty-seven percent of the respondents got one or more shots, while
the rest were unvaccinated.
Among those who took the COVID vaccines, 6 percent took one dose,
while the rest took 2–4 shots.
Of the newly diagnosed medical conditions, the most common ones
were blood clots (21 percent), heart attack (19 percent), liver damage
(18 percent), leg and lung clots (17 percent), and stroke (15 percent).
Sixty-seven percent of participants said that getting the vaccine was
a good decision, while 24 percent were neutral.
Another poll conducted at the same time surveyed 829 American adults
ages 18–49, and the results show that 22 percent of them reported
a new condition within weeks or months after getting a COVID-19
vaccine.
The top conditions were autoimmune problems, blood clots, stroke/lung
clots, liver damage/leg clots/heart attack, and disrupted menstrual cycle.
Ten percent of these conditions were severe.
Fourteen percent of the participants regretted taking the vaccine, while
58 percent thought it was a good decision, and the rest were neutral.