OB-GYN Drops Alarming Miscarriage Data Before Congress: “I’ve Never Seen This Before”

Dr. Kimberly Biss, an OB-GYN who has been involved in 8,000 pregnancies, details how miscarriage rates have doubled year-over-year since the introduction of the COVID-19 injections.

“I’ve never seen anything like this before,” Dr. Kimberly Biss, an OB-GYN who has been involved in 8,000 pregnancies, testified before Congress on Monday during the “Injuries Caused by COVID-19 Vaccines” hearing.

“How many of your patients or pregnant women that you know of experience miscarriages after taking the COVID-19 vaccines — or injections?” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) inquired.

Dr. Biss began by explaining that the vaccination rate among her patient population was approximately 60%, with the majority of patients receiving three injections. “Very few received four or more.”

“What’s concerning,” Dr. Biss explained, “is that the majority of patients received their injections in 2021 or early 2022.” However, we are still seeing aftereffects.”

The Data

Dr. Biss contacted Dr. Jessica Rose, an accomplished applied mathematician, last year and shared her practice’s data for Dr. Rose to conduct an in-depth analysis, which she summarized in a Substack publication. Dr. Rose discovered the following:

The graph above compares the number of miscarriages (orange) to the number of new patients (blue) that Dr. Biss received for each year. Dr. Biss testified in front of Congress that her miscarriage rate in 2020 would be around 4%. In 2021, that figure is expected to more than double to 7 to 8%. In 2022, the miscarriage rate more than doubled, reaching a staggering 15%.

Miscarriage Rate vs. Historical Context

“A normal miscarriage rate of 13% to 15% is quoted in my obstetric textbook and in some articles.” Dr. Biss confirmed, “I’ve never seen that clinically.” She discussed a comprehensive study conducted by Naert and colleagues, which discovered that the average miscarriage rate was 5.39%. “And even that’s a little high,” Dr. Biss observed. For the year 2020, her practice’s miscarriage rate was only 4%.

“I’ve Never Seen This Before”

Dr. Biss outlined specific time periods when miscarriage rates were atrociously high:

“For some reason, we peaked in November of that year (2021).” That’s when a non-clinical staff member approached me and said, ‘Dr. Biss, do you realize we’ve had eight miscarriages this month?’ That’s a huge number (exceeds 30%) in a practice that delivers 20 to 25 patients.

“I will tell you in December (2022),” she said, adding, “I’ve never seen this before.” We had 41 new patients, 13 of whom had lost their babies. So [31.7%] is right there.”

“And then in January and February of 2023, it still remained high — didn’t normalize until June of this year, then went up a little bit and came down in September.”

The Problem Determining the Vaccine Link

“You (Marjorie Taylor Greene) inquired as to how many patients received the vaccine but then lost their babies.” “It’s difficult to say,” Dr. Biss said. “I can tell you 60% of my patients got vaccinated.”

“But the problem is,” she went on, “if they’re brand new to the practice, I haven’t seen them yet because I’m the only person in my practice who asks every patient, ‘Have you gotten a vaccine?'” ‘How many are there?’ ‘What brand?’ ‘When?’ ‘Did you get COVID?’ ‘How many times have you done it?’ Because, like it or not, that is now part of your medical history. “I’m the only one who asks those kinds of questions.”

According to Dr. Biss, if a woman miscarries and you ask her, “Well, did you get an injection?” You may appear accusatory to that person. “You don’t want to ever make a woman feel like she caused her baby to not be born,” she said. “So it’s hard to get the exact data in all those patients.”

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