Insurers: vaccinated get infected with Covid 3 times more often Kaiser Permanente (KP), a well-known insurance company and healthcare provider, has commissioned a study to evaluate the effectiveness of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine against the dominant omicron subvariants. The KP study (https://bit.ly/3Vv94Oe) revealed that those who are triple-vaccinated are more likely to be infected with COVID-19. Shockingly, or maybe not, they were also more likely to suffer severe illness and die from coronavirus. According to a report (https://bit.ly/3T6G65Q) by investigative journalist Daniel Horowitz, one chart on page 30 of the KP preprint study found that vaccine efficacy against the omicron subvariants dropped significantly 14 to 30 days after vaccination. The efficacy continues to fall in the following months until it reaches negative territory after five months. This suggests that the recipients are more likely to get coronavirus than the unvaccinated. Additionally, the study results indicate that triple-vaccinated individuals are at greater risk of getting COVID-19 after five months than those who only received two vaccine doses. Horowitz, who has reported on the negative efficacy of the coronavirus vaccine for the past year, added that it's possible that the vaccines "prime the body to respond with a version of the virus that has long since changed, thereby making the natural immune response misfire." Those who support COVID-19 vaccine mandates claim that this is the reason for the new bivalent shot for the BA.5 omicron variant that was approved after it was studied in only eight mice and no human volunteers, said Horowitz. But since a new variant is surging, the new shot is as irrelevant as the previous ones and may even be counterproductive. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that the new BA.4.6 variant now accounts for at least 13 percent of all COVID-19 cases and is rising sharply. Other variants also continue to spread. Dr. Meryl Nass, an epidemiologist and internal physician, featured Horowitz's article on her Substack page. Nass wondered if the KP study was conducted because the company was worried (https://bit.ly/3S6aVX3) about the excess illness it was seeing. She said Kaiser "might be willing to do a little truth-telling" as the company tries to determine "who is going to pay for this unexpected hit, which presumably did not stop in 2021 but continues apace."