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Yes, SADS is real and screening can detect an inherited cardiac condition in 22-53 per cent of families. Why have we never heard of this phenomenon before? Probably because screening in prior generations became routine and so it was quietly expected. But, now, we are hearing a lot more about ‘SADS’.
When myopericarditis is a known side effect of a certain injection, this new trope – through media – is disingenuous.
Jones had been told by police the cause was suspected to be sudden arrhythmic death syndrome (SADS), also known as sudden adult death syndrome.
SADS is an umbrella term used to describe deaths of otherwise healthy people, usually under 40, after their heart stops beating, due to an, often undiagnosed, genetic instability of the heart. […]
Hokitika-born Tauwhare had no known heart condition and no family history of heart disease, Jones said.
The label SADS is useful for under-40s (as per clinical definition); over 40, another diagnosis can usually be found (the old nature vs nurture debate is handy).
“We are most interested in it affecting young people so that’s generally people between the age of one and 40, after which time non-genetic diseases start to dominate,” Stiles said.
Can you imagine what this does to a family? With no history, whatsoever, of heart disease (because there is none), they’re being told it’s a hereditary thing:
“When the family sees us about their loved one who has died, they are grieving and oddly enough sometimes they have some guilt about the fact that they have passed on a hereditary disease to their child.”
Nice gaslighting job; blaming the victim. Call it anything, as long as it’s not the jab…
Read more here. Discuss it on The BFD.