Part 1: Understanding Sarcopenia
1.Mitchell WK, et al. (2012). Sarcopenia, dynapenia and the impact of advancing age on human skeletal muscle size and strength; a quantitative review. Front Physiol. 3:260.
2.Cruz-Jentoft AJ, et al. (2019). Sarcopenia: revised European consensus on definition and diagnosis. Age Ageing. 48(1):16–31.
1/ Steve Kirsch is at it again — defending an unpublished, unreviewed “study” that even Henry Ford Health says didn’t meet scientific standards.
Let’s take apart his claims, line by line.
This one’s going to sting.
@IntegralAnswers
2/ Claim 1: “The Henry Ford study followed CDC guidelines.”
Reality: The 2012 CDC guidance covers post-licensure safety surveillance, not retrospective chart reviews.
Kirsch doesn’t know the difference between a VAERS analysis and a pediatric EHR cohort.
3/ Claim 2: “Cancer rates were equal → no detection bias.”
Absurd. Cancer is rare in toddlers. Similar rates say nothing about bias in diagnosing asthma, allergies, or developmental delay — conditions where health-care use drives detection.
1/ Antivaxxers love this graph.
They claim it “proves vaccines didn’t save lives.”
But it’s one of the most misleading visuals ever shared. Let’s break down why. 👇
2/ 🧩 First trick: it shows deaths, not disease cases.
By the 1940s, better hospitals & antibiotics helped people survive infections.
But nearly every child still caught measles or whooping cough.
#Epidemiology #PublicHealth
3/ 📊 In the pre-vaccine U.S.:
• 3–4 million measles infections every year
• 400–500 deaths
• 48,000 hospitalizations
• 1,000 brain injuries (encephalitis)
Deaths dropped—but the virus didn’t. Everyone still got measles.
#VaccinesSaveLives
1/Disinformation spreads faster than disease. Shot in the Arm follows how fear, fraud, and politics turned vaccines—the greatest lifesaving tool—into a cultural battlefield. This is about science, trust, and the social contract.
2/ Prologue: 1918 flu killed Karen’s great-great-grandmother. In 2020 she realizes the hard truth—denial and fatigue aren’t new. They’re human nature. We repeat the same mistakes unless we learn, together.
3/ Flashback to 2019: Measles roars back despite a safe, effective MMR. WHO flags vaccine hesitancy as a top global threat. When vaccines work “nothing happens”—and that success makes them easier to doubt.