Early signs of vitamin deficiencies?
When cases of death occur shortly after vaccination, they naturally draw attention—but such reports don’t necessarily mean the vaccine caused the death. Here's a quick breakdown: People die every day from a variety of causes. Early in vaccine rollout, many recipients were older or had existing healtRead more
When cases of death occur shortly after vaccination, they naturally draw attention—but such reports don’t necessarily mean the vaccine caused the death. Here’s a quick breakdown:
People die every day from a variety of causes. Early in vaccine rollout, many recipients were older or had existing health conditions. Deaths among such groups can coincide with vaccination purely by timing—not causation. Public health agencies investigate each case carefully to confirm any real link .
Multiple large-scale studies found no significant increase in deaths following vaccination:
In England, no rise in all-cause or cardiac mortality was observed in young people after mRNA vaccines, and the small uptick seen in young women after non-mRNA vaccines was exceedingly rare .
A CDC review in Oregon found that none of the sudden cardiac deaths in young adults were attributed to the vaccines .
Rare cases of severe side effects have been identified—like blood clots with low platelets (TTS/VITT) linked to adenovirus-based vaccines such as AstraZeneca or Johnson & Johnson—but these are extremely uncommon and have been extensively monitored .
The benefits of COVID-19 vaccination overwhelmingly outweigh the risks, with major reductions in severe illness and death. For instance, mRNA vaccines have been credited with saving millions of lives globally, including a significant reduction in mortality in Europe alone .
Deaths occurring after COVID-19 vaccination are investigated thoroughly, and most are found to be coincidental rather than caused by the vaccine. Severe reactions are exceptionally rare, and the protective benefits of vaccination are clear.
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When your body is sending the "SOS" indicators. Vitamin deficiencies typically do not manifest all at once. Instead, your body begins to signal subtle indicators that something is off. Even though you may choose to ignore those signals, paying attention, especially in the early stages, may save youRead more
When your body is sending the “SOS” indicators.
Vitamin deficiencies typically do not manifest all at once. Instead, your body begins to signal subtle indicators that something is off. Even though you may choose to ignore those signals, paying attention, especially in the early stages, may save you from more serious health outcomes down the road.
Some Initial Signs:
Tired all the time
If you are sleeping like a baby yet feel like a zombie by noon, this suggests low vitamin B12, iron, or vitamin D levels – generally, low energy will be the result of something low; these vitamins help with energy production and oxygen transport in the body.
Dry Skin & Hair Loss
Not a “bad hair day” but the result of low vitamins A, C, and E, or Biotin. Dryness in the skin creates flaking, or hair losing its thickness can suggest low vitamin and mineral levels.
Mouth Issues
Cracked corners of your mouth, sore/very tender tongue, or an increased frequency of mouth ulcers can signal a B vitamin deficiency (in particular B2, B3 and B12) or iron deficiency.
Brittle Nails
If your nails chip very easily or peel very easily suggests low levels of Biotin, calcium, or iron.
Getting Colds Frequently
If you are in the office and you are catching every bug that comes into your space, that may signal that your immune system is calling for vitamin C, D, and Zinc.
Changing Moods
If you often experience extreme irritability, anxiety, or feeling blue, that may suggest you are deficient in vitamin D, B12, and/or folate, which can affect brain chemistry.
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