If you’ve been vaccinated, studies show you’re more likely to suffer from ear disease, blood disorders and hair loss

Several new studies out of Korea reveal that people who get vaccinated are much more prone than the unvaccinated to develop serious health conditions like ear disease and blood disorders.

Researchers looked at data from the Korean National Health Insurance Service to compared health outcomes between vaccinated and unvaccinated people. Pretty much across the board, vaccinated people are much sicker than unvaccinated people.

In one of the studies they looked at, researchers discovered that rates of 13 different immune-related non-fatal adverse events (irAEs) are notably higher among the vaccinated compared to the unvaccinated. These non-fatal problems include menstrual disorder, bruising, tinnitus, inner ear disease and other forms of ear disease.

“Vaccination significantly increased the risks of non-fatal irAEs,” wrote Dr. Eun Mi Chun and colleagues from Ewha Womans University’s School of Medicine.

The criteria the researchers used looked at records from people aged 20 and up. Those who received their second dose or who completed a primary series of Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) injections before Sept. 30, 2021, were counted as “vaccinated,” while the “unvaccinated” only included people who never received any injections.

The vaccinated group included 1.4 million people while the unvaccinated group included just 289,576 people. The latter group skewed younger with fewer comorbidities.

Researchers specifically measured cumulative incidence rates of adverse events because they decided that non-fatal immune-related problems after COVID injection “have yet to be comprehensively elucidated.”

Vaccinated people suffer higher rates of warts, herpes and hair loss

After examining diagnoses among the two cohorts three months after vaccination, researchers discovered that cumulative incidence per 10,000 people was higher in the vaccinated group for all but one of the problems: visual impairment. Rates of glaucoma or vision loss, warts, herpes zoster and alopecia (which causes hair loss) were all higher in the vaccinated group.

“The findings of this study suggest that clinicians should maintain closed observation of a range of nonfatal irAEs after vaccination, given that these manifestations might emerge post-vaccination,” the researchers wrote.

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