Study shows the aerosol transfer of vaccine-induced COVID antibodies to the unvaxxed

Update: August 14, 2023. ImmunoHorizons have published the featured research

A preprint study shows that antibodies elicited by COVID vaccination may be transferred by aerosol to another person. The authors are from the University of Colorado School of Medicine – Anschutz Medical Campus.[1]

The study compared anti-COVID-19 antibodies among vaccinated and unvaccinated households with adults and children.

The results showed that children living in a household with a vaccinated parent have higher immunoglobulin G or IgG and IgA levels in their noses.

In contrast, the antibody levels of children who live in a household where no one is vaccinated are undetectable. (Antibodies are the same as immunoglobulins)

Next, they classified the parents and the children according to the amount of IgG and IgA antibodies in their noses. In thirty-four adult-children pairs, there is a  significant relationship between the amount of IgG in vaccinated parents and unvaccinated children in the same household. 

To the authors, this means that antibodies from the saliva and nasal secretions of COVID-vaccinated people may be transferred to the unvaccinated by droplets or aerosols.

Is this proof of shedding?

Technically, no. Vaccine shedding happens only in live attenuated virus vaccines, whereas Pfizer and Moderna are modified RNA injections. In vaccine shedding, the virus regains the ability to multiply and spread to other people to cause illness. An example is when the oral polio vaccine (OPV) in Africa led to more polio cases than the wild-type virus

The authors from the Colorado study conclude that the antibodies detected in the children of vaccinated parents are transferred by aerosol. [1] But there may be another mechanism we should consider. People can also exhale proteins. Like spike proteins. I wrote about that topic at

Can Breathing Spread the Spike Protein?

Once the exhaled spike proteins are inhaled by someone else, an immune response in the form of antibodies can happen, just like in any respiratory virus.

The modified RNA in the shots can make the body produce spike proteins. Is it possible that the vaccinated adults exhaled spike proteins and the children developed antibodies against it? The same antibodies that the study detected? Theoretically, it can happen.

Read about how the body makes the toxic spike proteins following the mRNA COVID shots at:

13 ways that the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein causes damage

Can the antibodies provide protection?

The journal Science published research from Israel that gives us a clue. The study evaluated the risk of an unvaccinated child getting COVID-19 during two pandemic periods. The Alpha and the Delta variant waves. [2]

The research showed that a child with one vaccinated parent has a 26 and 20.8 lower risk of COVID-19 in the Alpha and Delta period, respectively. Meanwhile, those with two vaccinated parents have a 71.7 and 58.1 decreased chance of getting COVID-19.

The study infers that passive immunity against COVID-19 is transferred from the vaccinated to the unvaccinated.

That looks well and good; however, an unvaccinated child has a low risk of developing severe COVID-19.

That is why I wrote this – The FDA approved Pfizer COVID-19 shots for babies and toddlers. And that is wrong!

The featured study is unique because it is the first study that shows that vaccine-induced antibodies can be transferred to an unvaccinated by aerosol.

No other vaccines can do that. I think the unvaccinated children actively produced the antibodies detected in the study as a response to the spike proteins exhaled by the vaccinated.

A study should be made to see if spike proteins can be exhaled and provoke an immune response from another human. 

 

Truth heals. Lies kill. Don’t Get Sick!

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References:

  1. Ross M. Kedl, Elena Hsieh, Thomas E. Morrison, Gabriela Samayoa-Reyes, Siobhan Flaherty, Conner L. Jackson, Rosemary Rochford. Evidence for Aerosol Transfer of SARS-CoV2-specific Humoral Immunity. medRxiv 2022.04.28.22274443; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.04.28.22274443
  2. Hayek, S., Shaham, G., Ben-Shlomo, Y., Kepten, E., Dagan, N. et al. Indirect protection of children from SARS-CoV-2 infection through parental vaccination. Science, eabm3087, doi:10.1126/science.abm3087 (2022)

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