New Zealand Gp Addressed City Council
A practising doctor of 16 years who recently moved to Southland, addressed the Invercargill City Council this week, with scientific research that shows the Covid-19 vaccine does not prevent transmission.
Dr Sophie Febery used to be a GP at the Methven Medical Centre until recently when the vaccine mandates came into effect, and was the first to start a mask campaign last year with Professor Michael Baker.
Dr Febery told the council she had lost faith in the vaccine as a solution to the pandemic, and believed Ivermectin was one of the most safest drugs in the world.
Her findings co-incide with the release this week of Pfizer documents that shows worldwide there have been more than 42,000 adverse reactions to the vaccine between 1st December 2020 to 28th February 2021. Pfizer / FDA release first lot of vaccine data here
Dr Febery said Pfizer was not a ‘sterilising’ vaccine like the measles where it “absolutely stops you getting the disease,” it was only meant to reduce the severity of Covid-19.
She also shared a Ministry of Health document that states that when vaccination rates were over 80%, then the vaccinated were more likely to spread the virus than the unvaccinated.
Dr Febery believed there were plenty of early preventative treatments such as Zinc, Vitamin C and D as well as inhaled steroids that were available, and downplayed the seriousness of the virus.
“The good news is, it isn’t the Ebola-like plague that we thought it was.”
She said in her recent professional experience she had seen auto-immune ‘flare ups,’ of her patients’ conditions, as well as heart attacks and blood clots in those who were vaccinated.
Many were unable to get exemptions.
This also included people with blood cancers where their conditions worsened straight after the vaccine, before settling down again.
Dr Febery said most people that were not vaccinated have very valid reasons for not being jabbed, such as experiencing significant reactions to the first, or had personal and/or family history of heart conditions, and were waiting on long-term studies to confirm it was going to be safe for them.
She believed the vaccine provided some protection – but only after the second jab, and after three months that protection then started to wane.
Sophie and registered nurse Nicola Harrison (who also spoke to the meeting), were concerned that unvaccinated people would be excluded from society if the council made vaccine passes compulsory across its public facilities.
They believe the vaccine passes will do more public harm than good.
“We must think holistically, and we must foster love and inclusion.”
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