Last week over video call, I had the privilege of meeting three extraordinary women. Caroline, Charlet and Megan followed government advice in good faith and took the Covid vaccines. Today, they are dealing with debilitating injuries that have left them in pain and with an uncertain future.
This alone is heart-breaking. What makes it doubly painful is the lack of support and care they have subsequently received. Here in the UK, vaccine-injured men and women are struggling to receive the treatment they need: at best due to lack of awareness, at worst, due to stubborn denial. The government, the National Health Service and the media are failing them – and as a result, they have become increasingly isolated. Unable to work, they also end up having to spend huge amounts of money in their quest for treatment, leaving them even more vulnerable.
This is a sad and familiar tale. What moved me so much about these women is their determination to do something about it. Despite their symptoms, they are doing what they can to raise awareness and support those in the same predicament. Their support group, UK CV Family, comprises only people who have been harmed by the vaccines and has over three hundred members. They are now launching a campaign to contact every political representative whose constituency includes one or more of those members. They want to make sure each representative is aware that they have vaccine-injured constituents, that vaccine injury is a major issue, and that they need to do something about it. They have also written to over 100 scientists, doctors, researchers and National Health Service boards, asking them to join them in researching their injuries and finding effective treatments.
These women are undertaking this while also dealing with their own symptoms. It is awe-inspiring and also distressing. They shouldn’t have to do this, after all. It is doctors, scientists, politicians who should be stepping up to take care of them, to advocate for them and bring them the healing they need. I really hope that they receive a good response from their outreach. Either way, I told them in no uncertain terms that they have a home with us at the World Council for Health and we will do all we can to support them.
I asked them if I could share an edited clip of our conversation and they agreed. I hope everyone who watches this can recognise that putting themselves forward in this way takes tremendous courage. They need their stories heard and it behoves us all to listen with the utmost attention and respect.
Very soon, I am going to meet Caroline in person. I’m hoping we can have a conversation to share with you all, so I will keep you posted. In the meantime, I want to let you know about Caroline’s book. Called Covid Vaccine Adverse Reaction Survival Guide, it offers well-researched information on how to cope, plus practical measures that can promote healing. If you know of anyone experiencing adverse side effects from the Covid-19 vaccines, please let them know about UK CV Family and also Caroline’s book. It may help, greatly.
Best wishes,
Tess
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