Health & Wellness
Our parents, if they're still with us, have probably started to need more help. They may come back from doctors' appointments with complicated diagnoses, and even more complicated prescriptions. They're a little more tired than they used to be, and they often don't tell us the half of it, to spare our feelings.
The inevitable decline of the body is difficult to live with, but we put up with it until we can't. It beats the alternative.
Experts from The Australian National University (ANU) have unearthed a natural way the body prevents autoimmune disease and allergies. The process is driven by a protein in the body called neuritin.
"We found this absolutely fascinating mechanism of our own bodies that stops the production of rogue antibodies that can cause either autoimmunity or allergies," senior author, ANU Professor Carola Vinuesa, said.
"It's been known for years that neuritin has a role in the brain and in the nervous system but we found an abundance of neuritin in the immune system and its mechanism - which has never been described in biology.
"We have shown it is one of our immune system's own mechanisms to prevent autoimmunity and allergy and now we have the evidence, we can go on to harness that for treatment."
The researchers say they set out over five years ago to bridge a knowledge gap on how the immune system works following an educated guess that neuritin might have a regulatory function in stopping allergies and autoimmune disease.
The study, published today in Cell, found neuritin can prevent the production of pathogenic antibodies.
The Dutch government announced the move saying the suspension would begin immediately and remain in place until at least March 29. Health minister Hugo de Jonge said: "Based on new information from Norway and Denmark, we are pausing the administration of the AstraZeneca corona vaccine for two weeks as a precautionary measure and pending further investigation."
The move comes after Norway's health authorities said on Saturday that three health workers who had recently received the vaccine had experienced severe side effects.
Comment: The Netherlands has joined Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, Lithuania, Estonia, Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Thailand and Ireland in suspending the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine.
See also:
- Proper caution: Ireland suspends AstraZeneca Covid vaccine over blood clot concerns
- Severe allergy added to AstraZeneca Covid shot side effects: EU regulator
- AstraZeneca's deal to not profit from COVID-19 vaccine set to expire in July 2021, when it expects 'pandemic period' to be over
- 8 EU countries SUSPEND AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine amid reports of fatal blood clots
- South Korean government investigates 7 deaths that followed Covid-19 vaccination with AstraZeneca's jab
- South Africa halts use of AstraZeneca vaccine after trial shows 'minimal protection' against new variant
- Switzerland bans AstraZeneca vaccine over lack of safety data, Europe refusing jab for older people over safety concerns

A dose of the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine. Ireland's deputy chief medical officer stressed that there was no proof it had caused blood clots.
Ireland is suspending use of the Oxford/AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine as a precautionary measure following further reports of blood clots in people who have received it, this time from Norway.
The deputy chief medical officer, Dr Ronan Glynn, said Ireland's advisory body on vaccines had recommended that deployment of the AstraZeneca jab should be "temporarily deferred" with immediate effect. He stressed, though, that there was no proof that the vaccine had caused blood clots.
The pause in Ireland's use of the AstraZeneca vaccine came as the head of the UK's Office for National Statistics, Prof Sir Ian Diamond, said he had "no doubt" there would be a further wave of coronavirus infections in the autumn.
Comment: The AstraZeneca jab seems to be particularly problematic:
- 8 EU countries SUSPEND AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine amid reports of fatal blood clots
- Ben Swann: Vaccine study halted over "serious adverse side effects" - UPDATE: AstraZeneca jab showing adverse effects
- Switzerland bans AstraZeneca vaccine over lack of safety data, Europe refusing jab for older people over safety concerns
- Young volunteer DIES during AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccine trial in Brazil. Pharma giant sez: 'No safety concerns'
- Severe allergy added to AstraZeneca Covid shot side effects: EU regulator
- Moderna vaccine causes "severe" side effects in up to 10 people prompting California to call for pause of roll out
- Disaster: 20% of Moderna's human test subjects sustained severe injuries from Gates-Fauci coronavirus vaccine
- What Moderna isn't telling us about their new mRNA COVID-19 vaccine
- Pregnant women warned not to take Moderna Covid vaccine
- Volunteers suffer serious reactions to Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine

Stronger interferon production, greater T cell activation, and increased susceptibility to autoimmunity are just some of the ways that females seem to differ from males.
Evidence of the gap has continued to emerge as COVID-19 datasets have expanded. For instance, data aggregated by The Sex, Gender and COVID-19 Project indicate that, although statistics vary substantially among countries around the world, men with the disease are around 20 percent more likely to be hospitalized than women. Once hospitalized, men are more likely to require intensive care, and once there, they're more likely to die.
Comment: Evidently if the sciences continue to allow post-modern thought (such as 'gender-fluidity') to warp their field of study the opportunity for discoveries will be stunted and, ultimately, the consequences will be deadly:
- Sex-specific Alzheimer's treatment found to benefit males but not females
- How genetics is proving that race is not necessarily a social construct
- Rheumatic diseases: The cost of survival during the Little Ice Age
- Post-nihilism, a template for where we are heading
- The gender identity concept came from a pedophile and human experimenter
The development comes a day after the European Medicines Agency said it was investigating a separate issue of blood clots that prompted Denmark to suspend use of the jab, but said it remained safe to use.
The Amsterdam-based EMA said it had "recommended an update to the product information to include anaphylaxis and hypersensitivity (allergic reactions) as side effects".
Comment: See also:
- AstraZeneca's deal to not profit from COVID-19 vaccine set to expire in July 2021, when it expects 'pandemic period' to be over
- 8 EU countries SUSPEND AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine amid reports of fatal blood clots
- South Korean government investigates 7 deaths that followed Covid-19 vaccination with AstraZeneca's jab
- Oxford-AstraZeneca eugenics links - James Corbett interviews Whitney Webb
- UK children to be test subjects of latest AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine trials
- South Africa halts use of AstraZeneca vaccine after trial shows 'minimal protection' against new variant
- Switzerland bans AstraZeneca vaccine over lack of safety data, Europe refusing jab for older people over safety concerns

A healthcare worker wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) stands next to a patient at the temporary wards dedicated to the treatment of possible COVID-19 coronavirus patients at Steve Biko Academic Hospital in Pretoria, South Africa, 19 January 2021.
Extrapolating from antibody testing on blood donors, the researchers found antibody levels of 63% in Eastern Cape province (EC), 46% in Free State (FS), 52% in KwaZulu Natal (ZN) and 32% in Northern Cape (NC). These figures were between 15 and 22 times higher than the percentage of the population that had tested positive for the virus to date.
Comment: Looks like South African study has inadvertently proven again the immune system of healthy individuals was perfectly capable of handling the latest of the ever-mutating family of coronaviruses. And that social interaction is what made the attenuation of its lethality possible.
- Why severe social distancing might actually result in more coronavirus deaths
- Notes on herd immunity
- The false argument for herd immunity and vaccination vs. naturally-made host resistance and strong immune systems
- Herd immunity, not herd mentality
- Top medical advisor to Trump attacked for urging sensible herd immunity strategy
- Objective:Health - Covid 1984: WHO Changes Definition of Herd Immunity
- "It's All Bullsh*t" - Three Official Leaks That Sink The Covid Narrative

Electrical impulses could speed wound healing by triggering better permeability in blood vessels, a new study shows.
The study, published in the Royal Society of Chemistry journal Lab on a Chip, found that steady electrical stimulation generates increased permeability across blood vessels, providing new insight into the ways new blood vessels might grow.
The electrical stimulation provided a constant voltage with an accompanying electric current in the presence of fluid flow. The findings indicate that stimulation increases permeability of the blood vessel — an important characteristic that can help wound-healing substances in the blood reach injuries more efficiently.
Comment: The idea that electromagnetic energy permeates and affects all aspects life, from space to the human body to plantlife, has been a point of speculation and experimentation for centuries, and in recent years there's been a resurgence in this area of research:
- The electric body: How your body's voltage can help you heal
- Bees use shark 'supersense' to help find food
- Tomato plants send electrical signals to each other through fungi
- 'Electric mud' teems with new, mysterious bacteria that may rewrite textbooks
- Scientists seek to understand how cells follow electric fields
- Magnetic pulses alter salmon's orientation, suggesting they navigate via magnetite in their tissue
The letter describes serious potential consequences of COVID-19 vaccine technology, warning of possible autoimmune reactions, blood clotting abnormalities, stroke and internal bleeding, "including in the brain, spinal cord and heart".
The authors request evidence that each medical danger outlined "was excluded in pre-clinical animal models with all three vaccines prior to their approval for use in humans by the EMA."
"Should all such evidence not be available", the authors write, "we demand that approval for use of the gene-based vaccines be withdrawn until all the above issues have been properly addressed by the exercise of due diligence by the EMA."
The letter is addressed to Emer Cooke, Executive Director of the EMA, and was sent on Monday 1 March 2021. The letter was copied to the President of the Council of Europe and the President of the European Commission.











Comment: And if you try to spread the word about the dangers of puberty blockers you'll be attacked - literally. From The Post Millennial: