Woman contracts WORLD’S DEADLIEST VIRUS after unknowingly being given the WRONG VACCINE
- A healthy 30-year-old woman in Ireland was mistakenly given a tuberculosis (BCG) vaccine instead of the intended MMR shot. The BCG vaccine, typically administered to infants under the skin, was incorrectly injected into her muscle, leading to a severe TB-related infection.
- The intramuscular injection allowed TB-causing bacteria (Mycobacterium bovis) to spread unchecked, causing an abscess in her deltoid muscle. Such complications are becoming more common, especially in healthy adults, and in immuno-compromised children.
- Doctors initially misdiagnosed her symptoms as skin inflammation before tests revealed the TB infection. She underwent six months of anti-TB medication, recovering fully after treatment.
- The case underscores the dangers of vaccine administration errors. Similar incidents, like an infant developing a thigh abscess from a misplaced BCG shot, show the risks of improper injection techniques.
In yet another careless misstep of the Vaccine Industrial Complex, a woman was jabbed with the wrong dirty vaccine and ended up with a severe case of the world’s deadliest disease. She walked into a clinic to get an MMR jab, if that’s not toxic enough, but the medical practitioner shot her up with the dirty tuberculosis stab, and it took the woman SIX MONTHS to recover from the TB infection she got directly from the dirty jab.
The toxic TB jab is injected into babies right after they’re born, making horrific adverse events quite popular for the little ones. Many of these babies get life-threatening lesions in the lungs, spleen or liver, plus inflamed bones and
widespread infection from the dirty TB jabs.
Dirty Vax recipient developed deadly abscess with oozing pus and deathly TB-causing bacteria spread throughout her body from the dirty TB jab
Walking into any hospital is a roll of the dice with your health and safety, even in America. Unless you have a severe wound, deadly infection, or are having a baby, you might want to weigh your other options. The BCG vaccine for TB contains bacteria and can easily be injected incorrectly or administered to the wrong patient. Healthcare professionals often misread the label on the vaccines, because they are careless. Sometimes surgeons will cut off the wrong arm or leg or operate on the wrong organ for this same reason.
The TB vaccine (BCG) contains weakened
Mycobacterium bovis and is meant to be injected just below the skin to trigger a localized immune response without spreading. Unlike viral vaccines (e.g., MMR), the bacteria in BCG must be carefully controlled; injecting it into the muscle can allow uncontrolled spread, leading to severe complications.
This case involved a healthy 30-year-old woman who developed an arm abscess after a misplaced BCG injection into her deltoid muscle. Other similar errors have occurred, such as an eight-month-old girl who developed a thigh abscess after an incorrect intramuscular BCG injection. The slow-growing
M. bovis infection formed a mass that required drainage. While localized abscesses are rarely fatal, untreated systemic infections can be deadly in up to 80% of cases.
Doctors emphasize that
injection errors are the primary cause of severe reactions, which may include abscesses, lymph node inflammation, bone pain, or systemic infections. This case, published in the
American Journal of Case Reports, highlights the importance of proper vaccine administration, even in healthy adults. Most complications occur in pediatric or immunocompromised patients, making this an unusual occurrence.
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Sources for this article include:
Pandemic.news
NaturalNews.com
SHTFplan.com
DailyMail.co.uk