The truth about 'Pfertility': Covid vaccines CAN disrupt menstrual cycles trends now

The truth about 'Pfertility': Covid vaccines CAN disrupt menstrual cycles trends now
The truth about 'Pfertility': Covid vaccines CAN disrupt menstrual cycles trends now

The truth about 'Pfertility': Covid vaccines CAN disrupt menstrual cycles trends now

An undercover video in which an alleged Pfizer executive raises concerns about the Covid shot's effect on menstrual cycles went viral last night.

Jordon Trishton Walker - who is said to have been a senior staffer in Pfizer's research and development division - was caught on film admitting it was 'concerning' that 'something irregular' was happening to women's periods after getting the company's vaccine.

'The vaccine shouldn't be interfering with that...It has to be affecting something hormonal,' he told an undercover reporter for the right-wing activist group Project Veritas.

The video was trending on Twitter last night under the hashtag 'Pfertility' and had been viewed 6million times at the time of writing. Many commentators, including Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene, raised concerns about the impact of the jabs on fertility.

There have been long-standing fears among women that because of the newness of the vaccine and mRNA technology and the observable changes it has on menstrual cycles, it could cause infertility.

But while it is widely accepted the Covid vaccine causes some irregularities to menstruation, there is nothing to suggest this affects women's chances of conceiving. In fact, birth rates went up in America and the UK in 2021.

Jordon Trishton Walker (pictured) is reportedly a Pfizer employee who revealed to Project Veritas concerns about the Covid vaccines causing fertility and menstrual cycle issues in some women that have received it

There is no confirmation that Mr Walker (pictured) works at Pfizer, but a statement released by the company last week did not deny he was an employee

This is the second video Project Veritas has released from their sting operation targeting Trishton Walker.

'There is something irregular about their menstrual cycles. So, people will have to investigate that down the line -  because that is a little concerning,' he told the reporter.

'If you think about the science it shouldn't be interacting with [glands responsible for hormones]. The vaccine shouldn't be interfering with that so we don't really know.'

He added: 'There is something happening but we don't always figure it out.'

After a cut in the video, he continued, saying: 'I hope we don't find out that somehow the mRNA lingers in the body, cause it has to be impacting something hormonal to impact menstrual cycles.'

DailyMail.com approached Pfizer again this morning about the claims made in the video but did not hear back. This website has reached out to the pharma giant more than half a dozen times in the past week about the Project Veritas story. 

Previous research has confirmed that the Covid vaccines can temporarily impact a woman's menstraul cycle.

An early 2022 study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and carried out by researchers at Oregon Health & Science University found women who received the vaccine have a menstrual cycle one day longer than usual, on average.

While anxiety-inducing in some cases, officials do not warn of any long-term harm from these changes.

The study included nearly 4,000 American women, 2,400 of which were vaccinated.

More than half of the vaccinated study population received Pfizer's shot, with the rest receiving the Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccines. 

The change was temporary, too, and women's periods returned to normal by the following month.

'It is reassuring that the study found only a small, temporary menstrual change in women,' Dr Diane Bianchi, director of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development - part of the NIH, said at the time.

A study published in

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