Study Finds COVID Vaccines May Have Significantly Impacted Fertility in Millions of Americans

For years, anyone who questioned the safety profile of COVID vaccinations was dismissed as spreading “dangerous misinformation,” but new scientific evidence suggests those concerns may have been more valid than originally acknowledged.

A new peer-reviewed study out of the Czech Republic has uncovered compelling evidence that COVID vaccinations appear to reduce fertility rates in people who receive them by a significant percentage.

The study was published by Manniche and colleagues in the International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine, which is about as respected a medical journal as you can find.

It analyzed 1.3 million women between the ages of 18 and 39 and discovered that women who received the jab were having 33% less successful pregnancies than the unvaccinated.

The study took place from January 2021 to December 2023. By 2022, vaccinated women averaged 4 live births per 1,000. The unvaccinated, meanwhile, averaged 6 live births per 1,000, giving us that concerning 33% drop.

What this means is that the unvaccinated were 1.5 times MORE LIKELY to bring life into this world with that “safe and effective” vaccine being the only difference…

Over that same time period, birth rates in the Czech Republic dropped from 1.83 per 1,000 women in 2021 to 1.37 in 2024 – that’s a SERIOUS drop, all coinciding with widespread vaccination campaigns.

Health officials and pharmaceutical companies promoted the COVID vaccine as essential for public health, but what this data suggests is that these injections may have contributed to accelerating an already existing fertility crisis – and the implications are staggering.

Estimates suggest that globally, 70% of women in their prime childbearing years received these vaccines, which makes these findings particularly concerning.

America’s birth rate was already on life support before this development. The U.S. total fertility rate (TFR) has been below the replacement level of 2.1 children per woman since the 1970s. And this potential vaccine-related fertility impact is adding fuel to an already burning crisis.

By 2023, that number had dropped to a record low of 1.61 according to the CDC. That’s not enough to sustain our population.

 

Across the globe, nearly every developed country is facing a similar crisis. Germany and Sweden, for example, saw their TFRs also hit historic lows of 1.4 and 1.5, respectively.

Similarly, recent studies have found that even when women DO get pregnant, they’re roughly 40% more likely to miscarry, and all of this represents a truly alarming scenario for the future of global population stability.

The broader implications of these findings cannot be ignored. If these vaccination programs – which were mandated for millions of workers and required for basic social participation – have indeed contributed to a significant fertility decline, this represents one of the most serious public health consequences in modern history. The very policies designed to protect public health may have inadvertently triggered a demographic crisis that could reshape society for generations to come.

This isn’t just about statistics on a page – this is about the fundamental ability of our civilization to sustain itself. When fertility rates drop this dramatically, entire social and economic systems begin to collapse. The potential connection between mass vaccination campaigns and plummeting birth rates demands immediate, transparent investigation and accountability.


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