Israel to Begin Vaccinating Kids Aged 5–11 Against Covid Next Week

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Batches of Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine fitted for children aged 5–11 are expected to arrive in Israel in the coming days as the country braces to begin their administration next week.

Health Ministry Director-General Prof. Nachman Ash told Ynet this morning that the only thing that was delaying the vaccine rollout for children was the arrival of the vaccine shipment in Israel. “I hope they arrive in the next few days,” Prof. Ash said interview. “We want to get on with it as soon as possible.”

According to Ash, the vaccine will be rolled out through the country’s health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and will also be available at schools and municipal vaccination centers. Ynet

{Matzav.com Israel}


8 COMMENTS

    • Thank You So Very Much!!!!!!!!! You said what absolutely has to be said 1,000 times better and sharper than I ever did!!

  1. Israel’s hospitals are full with 99% vaxinated patients. So they need young kids to join them.

    On July 16, 2021, the CDC looked into the deaths of 14 kids in VAERS who died after vaccination.
    Their deaths are still unexplained to this day.
    If it wasn’t the vaccine, what killed those kids?
    Steve Kirsch
    Nov 11, 2021

    • Dr. Palmer, a chiropractor? For real?
      Do you also quote nutritionists about neurosurgery, or dental hygienists in regard to gynecology? The man is a glorified massage therapist, who sells “supplements” to augment his spinal manipulations income, and meddles in topics that are way above his educational level, or pay grade. Basically, to any trained physician, he is an absolute nobody, and his opinions are as highly regarded as those of a grocer, a mailman, or a shoe shiner, few levels below those of a decent veterinarian.
      It is YOU, along with Alan Palmer, who need to get educated.

      • Ok, how about watching this?

        Dr. Peter McCullough speaks about vaccine safety, efficacy, and the continued need for early treatment.
        https://rumble.com/vochii-dr.-peter-mccullough-10272021-phoenix-az.html
        BIO of Dr. McCullough: Biography
        Personal History
        Dr. Peter A. McCullough was born in Buffalo, New York, on the 29th of December 1962. During high school, he and his family moved to Wichita Falls in Texas and later settled in Grapevine. He has lived and worked in various parts of the United States, including Washington and Michigan, and he now resides in Dallas, Texas.

        Academic History
        Dr. McCullough attended Baylor University and graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1984. He then attended the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, where he studied for his medical degree and graduated in June 1988. Following this, he undertook his residency in internal medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, where he trained for 3 years.¹

        Upon completing his residency in 1991, Dr. McCullough transferred to Grayling, Michigan, where he served for 2 years as an internal medicine attending at Mercy Hospital. Following his time at Mercy Hospital, he enrolled at the University of Michigan School of Public Health and studied a Masters degree in Public Health.

        After he graduated from the University of Michigan School of Public Health in 1994, he became a fellow in cardiovascular diseases at the Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan.

        Career Overview
        Dr. McCullough joined the Henry Ford Heart and Vascular Institute in Detroit following his fellowship at the Beaumont Hospital, where he remained until 2000. He then moved to Kansas City, Missouri, to serve as Section Chief of Cardiology of the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine, Truman Medical Centers.

        After his time in Missouri, Dr. McCullough returned to Michigan to serve as a Consultant Cardiologist at the Beaumont Hospital, and also as Chief, Division of Nutrition and Preventive Medicine Division of Cardiology. In 2010, following his stint at Beaumont Hospital, he was appointed as the Chief Academic and Scientific officer of the St. John Providence Health System, also in Detroit. In 2014, Dr. McCullough joined Baylor University Medical Center as Vice Chief of Internal Medicine. He was also appointed Chief of Cardiovascular Research of the Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute, and Program Director of the Cardiovascular Disease Fellowship Program.²

        Dr. McCullough is recognized internationally as a leading figure in the study of chronic kidney disease as a cardiovascular risk state, having over 1,000 publications to his name and over 500 citations in the National Library of Medicine.³ He is also a founder of the Cardio Renal Society of America, which is a group that dedicates itself to bringing cardiologists and nephrologists together to work on the increasing global issue of cardiorenal syndromes. He is the Co-Editor of Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine and is also currently serving as the Chair of the National Kidney Foundation’s Kidney Early Evaluation Program (KEEP), the largest community screening effort for chronic diseases in America.⁴

        Career Timeline
        1984: Graduated from Baylor University with a Bachelor in Science
        1988: Graduated with a medical degree from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
        1991: Completed his residency at University of Washington School of Medicine
        1991: Dr. McCullough begins his period as a medical attending at Mercy Hospital
        1993: Studies his Masters degree in Public Health at the University of Michigan School of Public Health
        1994: Begins his fellowship in cardiovascular diseases at the William Beaumont Hospital
        1997: Joins the Henry Ford Heart and Vascular Institute
        2000: Appointed to serve as Section Chief of Cardiology of the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine, Truman Medical Center
        2002: Made a Consultant Cardiologist and Division Chief of Nutrition and Preventive Medicine at the William Beaumont Hospital
        2010: Serves as the Chief Academic and Scientific officer of the St. John Providence Health System
        Current: Joined Baylor University Medical Center as Vice Chief of Internal Medicine and Chief of Cardiovascular Research of the Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute

        Recognition
        Dr. McCullough received the International Vicenza Award for Critical Care Nephrology for his outstanding work and contribution in the area of cardiorenal syndromes. He has also been a recipient of the Simon Dack Award from the American College of Cardiology, and his works have appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine, Journal of the American Medical Association, and other prestigious journals worldwide. He has been an invited lecturer at the New York Academy of Sciences, the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the European Medicines Agency, and the U.S. Congressional Oversight Panel.⁵

        Areas of Speciality
        Coronary Artery Disease
        Chronic Kidney Disease as a Cardiovascular Risk State
        High Blood Pressure
        High Cholesterol
        Hypertension
        Sports Cardiology

        References
        https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-mccullough-0842a070/
        https://www.cardiometabolichealth.org/peter-mccullough.html
        https://www.cardiometabolichealth.org/peter-mccullough.html
        https://www.cardiorenalsociety.org/what-we-do.html
        https://health.usnews.com/doctors/peter-mccullough-304612

  2. It would’ve been more diplomatic for Paroh to have vaxed the little boys instead of throwing them into the river or, even better, to vax their pregnant mothers. The problem was there was no fake media propaganda then.

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