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COVID-19 Vaccine mRNA Found in Breastmilk


By Techno Fog

A small but groundbreaking study (available here) has been released at the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Pediatrics, demonstrating that trace amounts of COVID-19 vaccine mRNA were found in the breastmilk of lactating women as soon as one hour after vaccination.

This study was conducted from February to October 2020 (more on that in a moment), and included only 11 lactating women, 5 of whom received the Moderna vaccine and 6 of whom received the Pfizer vaccine. The comparison was made between their pre-vaccine breastmilk (the control) and post-vaccine breastmilk.


The results? The breastmilk of 5 out of 11 women tested had detectable COVID-19 vaccine mRNA in their breastmilk. For those keeping score, that is 45% – nearly half – of the study group.

The mRNA was detected in breastmilk as early as 1 hour after vaccination, and as late as 45 hours after vaccination.
Of course, given the limited sample size, this doesn’t mean that the COVID-19 vaccine mRNA will be absent from breastmilk after 45 hours. We’ve already seen that the spike protein/mRNA can last for months after vaccination . According to one study summarized by Dr. Robert Malone:
the mRNA and the spike protein produced persists for weeks in lymph node germinal centers in human patients. Immunohistochemical staining for spike antigen in mRNA vaccinated patient LNs varied between individuals, but showed abundant spike protein in germinal centers 16 days post-2nd dose, with spike antigen still present as late as 60 days post-2nd dose. Having worked with mRNA for decades, I can attest that this is highly unusual.
Back to the study. According to the authors:

“These data demonstrate for the first time to our knowledge the biodistribution of COVID-19 vaccine mRNA to mammary cells and the potential ability of tissue EVs to package the vaccine mRNA that can be transported to distant cells.”

They speculate that following the administration of a COVID-19 vaccine, “lipid nanoparticles containing the vaccine mRNA are carried to mammary glands via hematogenous and/or lymphatic routes.”

The limitations of this study are unfortunate. There were only 11 participants, and the authors observe there is a “lack of functional studies demonstrating whether detected vaccine mRNA is translationally active.” This means that the safety of post-vaccination breastmilk is unknown.

Despite the lack of evidence demonstrating safety, the authors conclude: “The sporadic presence and trace quantities of COVID-19 vaccine mRNA detected in EBM suggest that breastfeeding after COVID-19 mRNA vaccination is safe, particularly beyond 48 hours after vaccination.”


That conclusion on safety is weakened, if not contradicted, by their own advice:

“… caution is warranted about breastfeeding children younger than 6 months in the first 48 hours after maternal vaccination until more safety studies are conducted.”

And what does the study mean by advising “caution”? They fail to provide specifics, but it seems they study’s authors are hinting at stopping breastfeeding for the first 48 hours post-vaccine until more information is available.

Our educated guess is supported by the authors’ conclusions about the lack of safety data, specifically:

  • They “did not test the possible cumulative vaccine mRNA exposure after frequent breastfeeding in infants.”
  • “The potential interference of COVID-19 vaccine mRNA with the immune response to multiple routine vaccines given to infants during the first 6 months of age needs to be considered.”

Were these findings hidden from the public?

There’s something else curious about this study. According to its supplement explaining the methodology, the study was “conducted from February to October 2020.”

If that is true (and we recognize the potential for author error), then the study has been suppressed for nearly two years.

You can’t help but guess that the reason was to not contribute to vaccine hesitancy. Unfortunately, publication delays allowed for contrary findings from more limited studies to take-hold and mislead the public about the lack of vaccine mRNA in breastmilk.

FDA/CDC/Big Pharma Promises

It should be no surprise that the findings of this study cast doubt on the promises made by the officials at the FDA and CDC who guaranteed the vaccines were “safe and effective” for pregnant women. Those promises were always questionable, as they are unsupported by the claims of the vaccine manufacturers themselves, who asserted: Available data on COMIRNATY/SPIKEVAX administered to pregnant women “are insufficient to inform vaccine-associated risks in pregnancy.”

It has long been the case that Moderna and Pfizer are less convinced than the CDC/FDA about the pregnant rat studies:

Anyway, in the face of the warning of caution from this latest study and its emphasis on the unknowns of safety data for infants, the CDC still recommends the COVID-19 for women who are breastfeeding:

“CDC recommends COVID-19 vaccines for everyone ages 6 months and older, including people who are pregnant, breastfeeding, trying to get pregnant now, or might become pregnant in the future and getting boosters, if eligible.”

As to Pfizer and Moderna claims about lactation? Both vaccine manufacturers currently say it is “not known” whether their vaccines are “excreted in human milk.”

Based on the results from this latest study, I’m guessing it’s because they didn’t bother to take a look.

See more at Techno Fog’s The Reactionary

READ MORE VACCINE NEWS AT: 21st Century Wire Vaccine Files

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