In anticipation of a coming avian influenza (bird flu) pandemic, the
American Medical Association (“AMA”) on Friday 19 July announced an
editorial update to the ‘Current Procedural Terminology’ (“CPT”) code
set to account for the development and administration of bird flu
“vaccines.”
The announcement came just days before World Health
Organisation (“WHO”) Director Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesus stated the “next
pandemic is a matter of when, not if.”
CPT is the leading medical terminology code set for describing healthcare procedures and services.
The new code updates electronic healthcare systems across the US.
“The
provisional CPT code is effective for use on the condition the H5N8
Influenza virus vaccine candidates receive emergency use authorisation
from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA),” the AMA announcement
reads. “The AMA is publishing the CPT code update now to ensure
electronic systems across the US health care system are prepared in
advance for the potential FDA authorisation.”
The controversial
Emergency Use Authorisation (“EUA”) tactic allows drugs with no
long-term safety data to be distributed to the public without receiving
full FDA approval, as with covid-19 injections.
Back in May, Dr.
Peter Marks, Director of the Centre for Biologics Evaluation and
Research (“CBER”) at the FDA, confirmed his agency will skip the
rigorous drug approval process for influenza bird flu vaccines.
The FDA intends to roll out bird flu jabs to the American public “as quickly as possible.”
However, EUAs are “only be granted when no adequate, approved, available alternatives exist,” according to Yale Medicine.
Antivirals
like Xofluza and broad-spectrum anti-parasitics like Ivermectin are
already fully FDA-approved, safe, and effective against bird flu,
removing the need for a bird flu mRNA injections EUA.
In
addition to Xofluza and Ivermectin removing the need for an EUA for an
mRNA bird flu vaccine, mRNA-based vaccine technology itself has proven
to be deadly.
Scientists estimate mRNA covid injections have
killed about 17 million people worldwide, which is more lives than the
virus itself is said to have taken....<<<Read More>>>...