Sunday, December 10, 2023

White Lung Syndrome: Experts Float Theories on What It Is, What Causes It and Does It Even Exist?

White Lung Syndrome: Experts Float Theories on What It Is, What Causes It and Does It Even Exist?



Regardless of what’s behind recent outbreaks of white lung disease, some medical experts said they believe public health officials are downplaying environmental stressors and ignoring the immune-degrading effects of vaccination and poor diets that make people — and especially children — more vulnerable to infections of all kinds.

Media outlets and some mainstream medical experts are sounding the alarm over reports of pediatric white lung disease(or syndrome) outbreaks. But not all medical experts agree on what’s causing the outbreaks or what they mean — or whether the condition even exists.

Many, including experts interviewed by The Defender, do agree on this, however: Regardless of what the disease is and what’s behind the recent outbreaks, public health officials are downplaying environmental stressors and ignoring the immune-degrading effects of vaccination and poor diets that make people — and especially children — more vulnerable to infections of all kinds.

Pediatricians Dr. Paul Thomas and Dr. Larry Palevsky on a recent episode of “Good Morning CHD” on CHD.TV pushed back on media claims of white lung disease, instead pointing to vaccine-induced hyperimmunity and often-dismissed environmental factors.

Dr. Lewis Coleman, a California anesthesiologist and author of “50 Years Lost in Medical Advance,” told The Defender he believes COVID-19 infections and vaccines could be activating the “mammalian stress mechanism,” resulting in a hyperinflammatory response where fibrin from the blood is expelled into the lungs, causing the white appearance on X-rays.

Conventional analyses from Chinese and U.S. health authorities cited the role of prior lockdowns in impaired immunity and common respiratory viruses as the likely cause behind upticks in pediatric hospitalizations, according to internet lecturerJohn Campbell, Ph.D.

Dr. Marc Siegel told Fox News the Chinese identifiedMycoplasma pneumoniae (also called “walking pneumonia”), a common respiratory pathogen, which can become “resistant mycoplasma,” he said, when too many kids receive antibiotic treatments.


Studies from Beijing show the bacterial resistance to myoplasmic pneumonia is between 70-90%, Campbell said.

Mainstream health authorities maintain the increase in childhood respiratory illnesses falls within normal ranges of seasonal sickness.

“There’s no such thing as white lung syndrome,” said Dr. Shira Doron of Tufts Medical Center on a recent NBC Boston segment shown in the CHD.TV episode. “The news story here is that a scary headline will spread even faster than a virus.”

In China, over 3,500 children were admitted for treatment of “white lung” in October and November, said Campbell.

Since August, Ohio’s Warren County Health District has recorded 142 pediatric pneumonia hospitalizations, according to NBC Boston.

The syndrome has also been noted in the Netherlands and Denmark, with the latter reporting 541 cases as of Nov. 26.


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