Americans wary of Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo for his iconoclastic approach to COVID-19 may be surprised to learn that his skepticism of one-size-fits-all recommendations is catching on in the scientific community and is backed by data from a nonprofit health institution second in name recognition to only perhaps the Mayo Clinic.
The science publishing establishment doesn’t want to give the data credence, however, with the corresponding author of the research telling Just the News on Monday the Cleveland Clinic team’s paper was rejected by peer-reviewed journals and its findings are now outdated.
The Florida Department of Health’s updated guidance Sept. 12 for COVID boosters, and Lapado’s Sept. 14 broadside against federal public health agencies for “gaslighting Americans” into thinking they need the “unproven” boosters, stands in stark contrast to federal guidance.
The public debate on more than four years of COVID response measures is not going away, with former National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins promoting his new book on “truth, science, faith and trust” with an excerpt in The Atlantic that repeats the verified falsehood that then-President Trump recommended taking bleach as a COVID treatment.
It’s the second time in less than a month that the magazine, which dates to the Civil War, has promoted the bleach myth, a staple of high-ranking Democrats including House Oversight Committee ranking member Jamie Raskin and White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients. […]
— Read More: justthenews.com
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