Author

Topic: Pfizer false data? what is doing there? (Read 128 times)

legendary
Activity: 3906
Merit: 1373
December 11, 2021, 07:11:37 PM
#11
wait. did tash just take a mailonline quote, and not take the opportunity...
they said a metaphoric 'magnet' and tash didnt grab that to push a mythical nano-magnet plot.


anyway. this topic began with a "Elizabeth Woeckner" blasting out how she seen many problems. yet. her education is not in science or medicine. its in roman history.

she didnt last long and was fired.
she is against clinical trials and tries to fight against the use of animals and humans on clinical trials.
that just about says all you need to know about her mindset towards clinical trials.

yes she is the person that tries getting clinical trials halted, suspended, terminated because they are against her beliefs.

and as for badecker..
.. seems he is OCD fixated on "isolation" yet again.
does he really think if he says it enough he can prove to himself he is right.
does he not realise that talking to himself is not a way to prove something.

to badecker, if you write something. and the next day read it. realise you wrote it and it does not make it true because you read it the next day and forgot you wrote it.
i understand you have memory issues. but you have been given proof several times before and even the contact details of those doing the lab work. if you have any questions. ask them
ignoring the info and avoiding contacting the source when you say you have not read the process. is a fault with your reading/memory. so take the opportunity to actually get the answers you seek. if you have the time to complain that you forgot or didnt read. then you have the time to find out

Reminds me that you haven't provided one link to a virus isolation, but only to virus creations and manipulations.

Certainly there would be a few videos of isolation being done, if there was a virus to find.

Cool
legendary
Activity: 4410
Merit: 4766
December 10, 2021, 10:45:04 PM
#10
wait. did tash just take a mailonline quote, and not take the opportunity...
they said a metaphoric 'magnet' and tash didnt grab that to push a mythical nano-magnet plot.


anyway. this topic began with a "Elizabeth Woeckner" blasting out how she seen many problems. yet. her education is not in science or medicine. its in roman history.

she didnt last long and was fired.
she is against clinical trials and tries to fight against the use of animals and humans on clinical trials.
that just about says all you need to know about her mindset towards clinical trials.

yes she is the person that tries getting clinical trials halted, suspended, terminated because they are against her beliefs.

and as for badecker..
.. seems he is OCD fixated on "isolation" yet again.
does he really think if he says it enough he can prove to himself he is right.
does he not realise that talking to himself is not a way to prove something.

to badecker, if you write something. and the next day read it. realise you wrote it and it does not make it true because you read it the next day and forgot you wrote it.
i understand you have memory issues. but you have been given proof several times before and even the contact details of those doing the lab work. if you have any questions. ask them
ignoring the info and avoiding contacting the source when you say you have not read the process. is a fault with your reading/memory. so take the opportunity to actually get the answers you seek. if you have the time to complain that you forgot or didnt read. then you have the time to find out
legendary
Activity: 3906
Merit: 1373
December 10, 2021, 04:42:31 PM
#9
It all has to do with virus isolation. You take all the data, both truth and lies, and you get the researchers to sequence parts of everything together, until they have made themselves a big story that the sheeple will swallow. Then you inject it into the sheeple.

Cool
sr. member
Activity: 1190
Merit: 305
Pro financial, medical liberty
December 10, 2021, 03:58:41 AM
#8


The chance of a blood clot after taking the AZ vaccine is significantly lower than the chance of a blood clot after contracting Covid. This has been known for the best part of a year. I've been posting about it for the best part of a year. The argument of "AZ causes blood clots, therefore you shouldn't take the vaccine" is akin to "most people who die in car crashes were wearing seat belts, therefore you shouldn't wear a seat belt."


Here's a neat visual summary, from here. You may also want to consider any of the other numerous papers and summaries, such as this one.


Just like that Covid now also gives you a blood clot, amazing.

BTW
What happend to your fellow forum clowns, did they end up with a blood clot?    Maybe they should have go to https://learntherisk.org/

33 is the new age to die  https://www.tmz.com/2021/12/09/ex-nfl-star-demaryius-thomas-dead-denver-broncos/
legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1277
December 10, 2021, 02:28:31 AM
#7


The chance of a blood clot after taking the AZ vaccine is significantly lower than the chance of a blood clot after contracting Covid. This has been known for the best part of a year. I've been posting about it for the best part of a year. The argument of "AZ causes blood clots, therefore you shouldn't take the vaccine" is akin to "most people who die in car crashes were wearing seat belts, therefore you shouldn't wear a seat belt."


Here's a neat visual summary, from here. You may also want to consider any of the other numerous papers and summaries, such as this one.

sr. member
Activity: 1190
Merit: 305
Pro financial, medical liberty
December 09, 2021, 03:19:15 PM
#6
............
What is the truth? The truth is always in the numbers.
Look around. Ask around. Ask everyone you know if they took the vaccine, and ask them how many people they knew have died because of it.
I'll start. I took the vaccine, the Astra-Zeneca shot, both doses. and, last time I checked, I was very much alive and kicking. And I have many friends and acquaintances that have also taken the vaccine (Astra-Zeneca, Sputnik 5 or Sinopharm, which are the available shots in Argentina), and they're all in good health.

How can you be save with only two shots, in Israel they already have four. What kind of science is that?

So many health people everywhere
https://1000covidstories.com/
more people crying out loud
https://www.vaxtestimonies.org/en/
or
https://nomoresilence.world/

The testimonies movie
https://rumble.com/vn212d-the-testimonies-project-the-movie.html

Heart attack form vaccine dont sound to good
https://twitter.com/i/status/1468351519837806593

The best part is injectiong unknown substance without knowing what will happen in years to come for something what does not even exist




full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 190
December 09, 2021, 02:14:02 PM
#5
So, what would be your point, other than your need to type endless posts?
Pfizer falsified data? Because a 2 week disgruntled former employee said so? Because the company would trust a new employee with sensitive information right from the moment she crosses the door?
MILLIONS of people have successfully been inoculated with the vaccine, and you don't see them dropping dead everywhere, do you? What is exactly your agenda?


I have no points, no agenda.

Really? Doesn't look like it.

Just only in those information are in British Medical Journal, so what is true? where is true? thats why I put here

Millions people took vaccine -> and if data are false.....

What is the truth? The truth is always in the numbers.
Look around. Ask around. Ask everyone you know if they took the vaccine, and ask them how many people they knew have died because of it.
I'll start. I took the vaccine, the Astra-Zeneca shot, both doses. and, last time I checked, I was very much alive and kicking. And I have many friends and acquaintances that have also taken the vaccine (Astra-Zeneca, Sputnik 5 or Sinopharm, which are the available shots in Argentina), and they're all in good health.
legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1277
December 08, 2021, 12:33:17 PM
#4
~

I think you've been taking too many rectal dominoes. You could try rectal Domino's, instead, but that's probably both more painful* and more expensive.







* Depending on the toppings. It would be worth asking them to go easy on the jalapenos.
sr. member
Activity: 1190
Merit: 305
Pro financial, medical liberty
December 07, 2021, 02:05:51 PM
#3
At this stage it is well and true a crime against humanity with this death shots, people will be taken to court
https://twitter.com/BitcoinSenpai/status/1468291499997675528/photo/1
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 190
December 07, 2021, 11:30:25 AM
#2
So, what would be your point, other than your need to type endless posts?
Pfizer falsified data? Because a 2 week disgruntled former employee said so? Because the company would trust a new employee with sensitive information right from the moment she crosses the door?
MILLIONS of people have successfully been inoculated with the vaccine, and you don't see them dropping dead everywhere, do you? What is exactly your agenda?
newbie
Activity: 12
Merit: 33
December 07, 2021, 10:00:54 AM
#1
first : link to British Medical Journal:   https://www.bmj.com/content/375/bmj.n2635

second:

Revelations of poor practices at a contract research company helping to carry out Pfizer’s pivotal covid-19 vaccine trial raise questions about data integrity and regulatory oversight. Paul D Thacker reports

In autumn 2020 Pfizer’s chairman and chief executive, Albert Bourla, released an open letter to the billions of people around the world who were investing their hopes in a safe and effective covid-19 vaccine to end the pandemic. “As I’ve said before, we are operating at the speed of science,” Bourla wrote, explaining to the public when they could expect a Pfizer vaccine to be authorised in the United States.1

But, for researchers who were testing Pfizer’s vaccine at several sites in Texas during that autumn, speed may have come at the cost of data integrity and patient safety. A regional director who was employed at the research organisation Ventavia Research Group has told The BMJ that the company falsified data, unblinded patients, employed inadequately trained vaccinators, and was slow to follow up on adverse events reported in Pfizer’s pivotal phase III trial. Staff who conducted quality control checks were overwhelmed by the volume of problems they were finding. After repeatedly notifying Ventavia of these problems, the regional director, Brook Jackson, emailed a complaint to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Ventavia fired her later the same day. Jackson has provided The BMJ with dozens of internal company documents, photos, audio recordings, and emails.

Poor laboratory management
On its website Ventavia calls itself the largest privately owned clinical research company in Texas and lists many awards it has won for its contract work.2 But Jackson has told The BMJ that, during the two weeks she was employed at Ventavia in September 2020, she repeatedly informed her superiors of poor laboratory management, patient safety concerns, and data integrity issues. Jackson was a trained clinical trial auditor who previously held a director of operations position and came to Ventavia with more than 15 years’ experience in clinical research coordination and management. Exasperated that Ventavia was not dealing with the problems, Jackson documented several matters late one night, taking photos on her mobile phone. One photo, provided to The BMJ, showed needles discarded in a plastic biohazard bag instead of a sharps container box. Another showed vaccine packaging materials with trial participants’ identification numbers written on them left out in the open, potentially unblinding participants. Ventavia executives later questioned Jackson for taking the photos.

Early and inadvertent unblinding may have occurred on a far wider scale. According to the trial’s design, unblinded staff were responsible for preparing and administering the study drug (Pfizer’s vaccine or a placebo). This was to be done to preserve the blinding of trial participants and all other site staff, including the principal investigator. However, at Ventavia, Jackson told The BMJ that drug assignment confirmation printouts were being left in participants’ charts, accessible to blinded personnel. As a corrective action taken in September, two months into trial recruitment and with around 1000 participants already enrolled, quality assurance checklists were updated with instructions for staff to remove drug assignments from charts.

In a recording of a meeting in late September2020 between Jackson and two directors a Ventavia executive can be heard explaining that the company wasn’t able to quantify the types and number of errors they were finding when examining the trial paperwork for quality control. “In my mind, it’s something new every day,” a Ventavia executive says. “We know that it’s significant.”

Ventavia was not keeping up with data entry queries, shows an email sent by ICON, the contract research organisation with which Pfizer partnered on the trial. ICON reminded Ventavia in a September 2020 email: “The expectation for this study is that all queries are addressed within 24hrs.” ICON then highlighted over 100 outstanding queries older than three days in yellow. Examples included two individuals for which “Subject has reported with Severe symptoms/reactions … Per protocol, subjects experiencing Grade 3 local reactions should be contacted. Please confirm if an UNPLANNED CONTACT was made and update the corresponding form as appropriate.” According to the trial protocol a telephone contact should have occurred “to ascertain further details and determine whether a site visit is clinically indicated.”

Worries over FDA inspection
Documents show that problems had been going on for weeks. In a list of “action items” circulated among Ventavia leaders in early August 2020, shortly after the trial began and before Jackson’s hiring, a Ventavia executive identified three site staff members with whom to “Go over e-diary issue/falsifying data, etc.” One of them was “verbally counseled for changing data and not noting late entry,” a note indicates.

At several points during the late September meeting Jackson and the Ventavia executives discussed the possibility of the FDA showing up for an inspection (box 1). “We’re going to get some kind of letter of information at least, when the FDA gets here . . . know it,” an executive stated.

Box 1
A history of lax oversight
When it comes to the FDA and clinical trials, Elizabeth Woeckner, president of Citizens for Responsible Care and Research Incorporated (CIRCARE),3 says the agency’s oversight capacity is severely under-resourced. If the FDA receives a complaint about a clinical trial, she says the agency rarely has the staff available to show up and inspect. And sometimes oversight occurs too late.

In one example CIRCARE and the US consumer advocacy organisation Public Citizen, along with dozens of public health experts, filed a detailed complaint in July 2018 with the FDA about a clinical trial that failed to comply with regulations for the protection of human participants.4 Nine months later, in April 2019, an FDA investigator inspected the clinical site. In May this year the FDA sent the triallist a warning letter that substantiated many of the claims in the complaints. It said, “t appears that you did not adhere to the applicable statutory requirements and FDA regulations governing the conduct of clinical investigations and the protection of human subjects.”5

“There’s just a complete lack of oversight of contract research organisations and independent clinical research facilities,” says Jill Fisher, professor of social medicine at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and author of Medical Research for Hire: The Political Economy of Pharmaceutical Clinical Trials.

Ventavia and the FDA
A former Ventavia employee told The BMJ that the company was nervous and expecting a federal audit of its Pfizer vaccine trial.

“People working in clinical research are terrified of FDA audits,” Jill Fisher told The BMJ, but added that the agency rarely does anything other than inspect paperwork, usually months after a trial has ended. “I don’t know why they’re so afraid of them,” she said. But she said she was surprised that the agency failed to inspect Ventavia after an employee had filed a complaint. “You would think if there’s a specific and credible complaint that they would have to investigate that,” Fisher said.

In 2007 the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the Inspector General released a report on FDA’s oversight of clinical trials conducted between 2000 and 2005. The report found that the FDA inspected only 1% of clinical trial sites.6 Inspections carried out by the FDA’s vaccines and biologics branch have been decreasing in recent years, with just 50 conducted in the 2020 fiscal year.7

RETURN TO TEXT
The next morning, 25 September 2020, Jackson called the FDA to warn about unsound practices in Pfizer’s clinical trial at Ventavia. She then reported her concerns in an email to the agency. In the afternoon Ventavia fired Jackson—deemed “not a good fit,” according to her separation letter.

Jackson told The BMJ it was the first time she had been fired in her 20 year career in research.

Concerns raised
In her 25 September email to the FDA Jackson wrote that Ventavia had enrolled more than 1000 participants at three sites. The full trial (registered under NCT04368728) enrolled around 44 000 participants across 153 sites that included numerous commercial companies and academic centres. She then listed a dozen concerns she had witnessed, including:

Participants placed in a hallway after injection and not being monitored by clinical staff
Lack of timely follow-up of patients who experienced adverse events
Protocol deviations not being reported
Vaccines not being stored at proper temperatures
Mislabelled laboratory specimens, and
Targeting of Ventavia staff for reporting these types of problems.
Within hours Jackson received an email from the FDA thanking her for her concerns and notifying her that the FDA could not comment on any investigation that might result. A few days later Jackson received a call from an FDA inspector to discuss her report but was told that no further information could be provided. She heard nothing further in relation to her report.

In Pfizer’s briefing document submitted to an FDA advisory committee meeting held on 10 December 2020 to discuss Pfizer’s application for emergency use authorisation of its covid-19 vaccine, the company made no mention of problems at the Ventavia site. The next day the FDA issued the authorisation of the vaccine.8

In August this year, after the full approval of Pfizer’s vaccine, the FDA published a summary of its inspections of the company’s pivotal trial. Nine of the trial’s 153 sites were inspected. Ventavia’s sites were not listed among the nine, and no inspections of sites where adults were recruited took place in the eight months after the December 2020 emergency authorisation. The FDA’s inspection officer noted: “The data integrity and verification portion of the BIMO [bioresearch monitoring] inspections were limited because the study was ongoing, and the data required for verification and comparison were not yet available to the IND [investigational new drug].”

Other employees’ accounts
In recent months Jackson has reconnected with several former Ventavia employees who all left or were fired from the company. One of them was one of the officials who had taken part in the late September meeting. In a text message sent in June the former official apologised, saying that “everything that you complained about was spot on.”

Two former Ventavia employees spoke to The BMJ anonymously for fear of reprisal and loss of job prospects in the tightly knit research community. Both confirmed broad aspects of Jackson’s complaint. One said that she had worked on over four dozen clinical trials in her career, including many large trials, but had never experienced such a “helter skelter” work environment as with Ventavia on Pfizer’s trial.

“I’ve never had to do what they were asking me to do, ever,” she told The BMJ. “It just seemed like something a little different from normal—the things that were allowed and expected.”

She added that during her time at Ventavia the company expected a federal audit but that this never came.

After Jackson left the company problems persisted at Ventavia, this employee said. In several cases Ventavia lacked enough employees to swab all trial participants who reported covid-like symptoms, to test for infection. Laboratory confirmed symptomatic covid-19 was the trial’s primary endpoint, the employee noted. (An FDA review memorandum released in August this year states that across the full trial swabs were not taken from 477 people with suspected cases of symptomatic covid-19.)

“I don’t think it was good clean data,” the employee said of the data Ventavia generated for the Pfizer trial. “It’s a crazy mess.”

A second employee also described an environment at Ventavia unlike any she had experienced in her 20 years doing research. She told The BMJ that, shortly after Ventavia fired Jackson, Pfizer was notified of problems at Ventavia with the vaccine trial and that an audit took place.

Since Jackson reported problems with Ventavia to the FDA in September 2020, Pfizer has hired Ventavia as a research subcontractor on four other vaccine clinical trials (covid-19 vaccine in children and young adults, pregnant women, and a booster dose, as well an RSV vaccine trial; NCT04816643, NCT04754594, NCT04955626, NCT05035212). The advisory committee for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is set to discuss the covid-19 paediatric vaccine trial on 2 November.

Footnotes
Provenance and peer review: commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

Competing interests: PDT has been doubly vaccinated with Pfizer’s vaccine.

This article is made freely available for use in accordance with BMJ's website terms and conditions for the duration of the covid-19 pandemic or until otherwise determined by BMJ. You may use, download and print the article for any lawful, non-commercial purpose (including text and data mining) provided that all copyright notices and trade marks are retained.

https://bmj.com/coronavirus/usage
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