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A South Korean peer-reviewed study found statistically significant increases in the incidence of Alzheimer’s disease and mild cognitive impairment in people who received a COVID-19 vaccine — particularly mRNA vaccines — within three months of post-vaccination.
The South Korean researchers — who on May 28 published their findings in QJM: An International Journal of Medicine — said they undertook the study due to concerns of COVID-19 vaccine side effects, “particularly potential links to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease.”
Medical commentator John Campbell, Ph.D., who analyzed the study on a July 22 episode of his YouTube show, asked why Western countries such as the U.S. or U.K. aren’t investigating such potential links. “Why is it often the Asian countries that seem to be leading the way in openness on this?”
According to Campbell, part of what’s preventing Western countries is that governments and pharmaceutical companies have refused to release low-level participant data. “Could it be that researchers in the West are working under limitations?”
In the South Korean study, researchers analyzed data from the Korean National Health Insurance Service from more than half a million residents of Seoul, South Korea, age 65 and older.
The study participants were randomly selected, Campbell said. “That’s important. The sample was random so it shouldn’t have any systematic biases.”
After dividing the individuals into vaccinated and unvaccinated groups, the researchers compared the incidence of both mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease between the groups.
Mild cognitive impairment is sometimes a stage in the progression of Alzheimer’s disease, according to the Mayo Clinic. However, some people with mild cognitive impairment get better over time.
Those in the vaccinated group received either an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine and/or a cDNA vaccine. However, the researchers later looked at just those who had received mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and found there to be an especially high incidence of cognitive decline when compared to the unvaccinated.
mRNA shots linked to a more than double rate of mild cognitive impairment
The authors of the South Korean study reported that after three months of receiving the vaccine, the mRNA vaccine group showed a roughly 22% increase in the incidence of Alzheimer’s disease (odds ratio: 1.225, p-value = 0.026) compared with the unvaccinated.
“This is significant because developing Alzheimer’s disease over three months is a very rapid development of Alzheimer’s disease,” Campbell said.
Similarly, the mRNA vaccine group after three months post-vaccination showed nearly 2.4 times the rate of mild cognitive impairment compared with the unvaccinated (odds ratio: 2.377, p-value < 0.001).
The researchers found no significant link between COVID-19 vaccination and vascular dementia or Parkinson’s disease, “which is encouraging,” Campbell said.
The researchers concluded that their study “suggests a potential link between COVID-19 vaccination, particularly mRNA vaccines, and increased incidences” of Alzheimer’s disease and mild cognitive impairment.
They wrote in their report:
“This warrants the need for further research to elucidate the relationship between vaccine-induced immune responses and neurodegenerative processes, advocating for continuous monitoring and investigation into the vaccines’ long-term neurological impacts.”
Campbell pointed out that the researchers only looked at incidence rates at three months after vaccination. “It could take several years for neurodegenerative process to become evident so we need this longer-term follow-up.”
Biden had 6 COVID shots, 3 COVID infections
Before discussing the study’s results, Campbell said that President Joe Biden has had six COVID-19 shots and three COVID-19 infections.
Campbell showed viewers a 2022 clip of Biden urging Americans to keep up with their COVID-19 vaccinations.
“I wouldn’t say Mr. Biden was particularly crisp on that occasion,” Campbell said, “but he was coherent and answering questions spontaneously. I think we can see that there’s been some decline in the more recent videos that we’ve seen.”
Campbell didn’t directly claim that Biden’s apparent mental decline was linked to COVID-19 vaccines but instead reiterated to viewers the number of COVID-19 shots and infections the president has had.
“Let me know if you think that information is significant,” he added.
Watch Campbell’s YouTube show here:
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