XPost: alt.health.virus.cure.alternatives, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns
XPost: sac.politics, fl.politics
Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo is raising alarms about what he sees
as the risk of potential cancer posed by COVID vaccines.
Ladapo, who rose to national prominence during the pandemic for spreading misinformation about the virus and promoting vaccination hesitancy, is
asking the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to answer questions about his
concerns regarding DNA integration in mRNA vaccines.
In a December 6 letter, Ladapo said he believed the drug delivery system
used by mRNA vaccines could be an "efficient vehicle for delivering
contaminant DNA into human cells." He said that because DNA integration
could theoretically affect oncogenes—the genes that have the ability to "transform a healthy cell into a cancerous cell"—that DNA contaminant
could cause cancer in vaccine recipients.
Ladapo was publicly rebuked by the FDA and CDC in March over his vaccine advice, which the federal agencies said "led to unnecessary death, severe illness and hospitalization," especially among Florida's population.
On Wednesday, Ladapo pressed the FDA and CDC to answer questions about
whether the risk of DNA integration was evaluated by drug manufacturers, whether FDA standards take the COVID vaccine's drug delivery system into account, and whether there is a risk of integration with reproductive
cells beyond the local injection site.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter), Ladapo said if FDA Commissioner Robert Califf didn't have the answers, "who gave him the right to treat human
beings as guinea pigs?"
Newsweek reached out to the FDA via email for comment on Ladapo's request.
Paul Offit, an internationally recognized infectious disease expert and
the director of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's Vaccine
Education Center, told Newsweek that although there can be trace levels of fragmented DNA from COVID vaccines, Ladapo's suggestion that it could
cause cancer is "fanciful."
He said that because the material that mRNA vaccines start with is double- stranded DNA plasma, there are still fragments of DNA in the final
vaccine. However, for that DNA to be harmful in humans, DNA would need to
enter the nucleus of a cell.
01:26
Watch Florida Democrats Storm Out Of Hearing With Florida's Top Doctor
By Katherine Fung
Senior Writer
FOLLOW
435
New Fairness Meter!
Hold us accountable by rating this article's fairness
Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo is raising alarms about what he sees
as the risk of potential cancer posed by COVID vaccines.
Ladapo, who rose to national prominence during the pandemic for spreading misinformation about the virus and promoting vaccination hesitancy, is
asking the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to answer questions about his
concerns regarding DNA integration in mRNA vaccines.
In a December 6 letter, Ladapo said he believed the drug delivery system
used by mRNA vaccines could be an "efficient vehicle for delivering
contaminant DNA into human cells." He said that because DNA integration
could theoretically affect oncogenes—the genes that have the ability to "transform a healthy cell into a cancerous cell"—that DNA contaminant
could cause cancer in vaccine recipients.
Ladapo was publicly rebuked by the FDA and CDC in March over his vaccine advice, which the federal agencies said "led to unnecessary death, severe illness and hospitalization," especially among Florida's population.
On Wednesday, Ladapo pressed the FDA and CDC to answer questions about
whether the risk of DNA integration was evaluated by drug manufacturers, whether FDA standards take the COVID vaccine's drug delivery system into account, and whether there is a risk of integration with reproductive
cells beyond the local injection site.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter), Ladapo said if FDA Commissioner Robert Califf didn't have the answers, "who gave him the right to treat human
beings as guinea pigs?"
Sign up for Newsletter
NEWSLETTER
The Bulletin
Your daily briefing of everything you need to know
Email address
Newsweek reached out to the FDA via email for comment on Ladapo's request.
Paul Offit, an internationally recognized infectious disease expert and
the director of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia's Vaccine
Education Center, told Newsweek that although there can be trace levels of fragmented DNA from COVID vaccines, Ladapo's suggestion that it could
cause cancer is "fanciful."
He said that because the material that mRNA vaccines start with is double- stranded DNA plasma, there are still fragments of DNA in the final
vaccine. However, for that DNA to be harmful in humans, DNA would need to
enter the nucleus of a cell.
Offit said it is already difficult for DNA to enter a cell, and even more difficult for it to stay in the cell, since the membrane hates foreign
DNA. But it would be impossible for the DNA to get to the nucleus because
it lacks the nuclear access signal required for it to enter that unit.
"In order to affect DNA, these fragments of DNA pieces would have to
integrate into DNA. That requires integration," Offit said. "Even if they
got into the nucleus, they don't have a way to integrate themselves into
DNA."
Dan Havlichek, the chief of Michigan State's infectious disease division,
told Newsweek that Ladapo's points are "legitimate," but "I doubt that we missed 18 million cases of cancer from the vaccine."
"What [Ladapo's conclusions] show is a profound lack of understanding of
how cells work," Offit said.
Ladapo, who was appointed to his role by Governor Ron DeSantis in
September 2021, has been widely criticized throughout the pandemic,
including by a former supervisor who refused to endorse him for the
position and who accused Ladapo of violating his Hippocratic oath with his COVID opinions.
During his tenure as surgeon general, Ladapo has sought to move the
state's health policy away from "fear."
Florida became the first state to contradict guidelines from the CDC and
the American Academy of Pediatrics after Ladapo recommended that healthy children not be vaccinated, citing anonymous, peer-reviewed studies.
An April report from Politico found that Ladapo altered a vaccine study conducted by the state to suggest that some doses posed a higher risk of cardiac arrest in young men than the initial document found.
Havlichek said that while everyone would have liked more studies looking
at vaccine safety, the emergency nature of the pandemic made it
appropriate to take risks, noting that the vaccinations were estimated to
have prevented 3 million deaths and 18 million hospitalizations.
"It's just it's so hard to watch this," Offit said. "What it is, is it
takes advantage of the fact that people don't know this. The minute that
they hear the words DNA or they hear the word gene, they think, 'This
could affect my genes.
"What the FDA should do is go through this," he continued. "They're the
ones who are the federal regulators here. So explain to people why it is
that the quantity of DNA that might be a manufacturer residual effect in
this vaccine is utterly and completely clinically irrelevant. Explain
that."
https://www.newsweek.com/florida-official-raises-alarms-that-covid- vaccine-can-cause-cancer-1851235
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)