They actually do not have dna materials from aborted babies.
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah — As the first doses of the
Pfizer vaccine were administered in Utah, the KSL Investigators dove into claims on social media that COVID-19 vaccines contain or utilize fetal cell lines in their development.
In the case of the Pfizer vaccine that was recently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration — those claims are false.
How An mRNA Vaccine Works
The primary ingredient in this vaccine is messenger RNA, or mRNA.
The mRNA is synthetically created in a lab and therefore does not rely on research cell lines for mass production of vaccines.
Dr. Meredith Wadman is the author of
“The Vaccine Race” and a reporter with
Science Magazine.
Wadman described mRNA as, “a little snippet of genetic code … and it’s tucked inside a teeny, tiny fat bubble called a lipid nanoparticle.”
Dr. Meredith Wadman, author of “The Vaccine Race” and a reporter with Science Magazine. (KSL-TV)
This fat bubble, she said, helps the body’s cells absorb the mRNA, which then produces a spike protein nearly identical to the one in the coronavirus.
“Our immune systems are alerted and trained, so that next time if we encounter the virus in real life, we’re going to have an immune army waiting to pounce on it,” she explained.
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(University of Utah Health)
Vaccine Ingredients
In addition to mRNA,
Pfizer lists multiple other ingredients in tiny amounts, including salts and sugar. The salts (monobasic potassium phosphate, potassium chloride, dibasic sodium phosphate dihydrate, sodium chloride) are natural products that help break down the protective barrier around the mRNA.
Ingredients for the Moderna vaccine, which could receive authorization from the FDA within days, can be found in the
company’s briefing document to the FDA.
It contains the same mRNA process as the Pfizer vaccine and does not utilize fetal cell lines.
https://ksltv.com/451339/are-fetal-cell-lines-used-in-the-covid-19-vaccine-ksl-investigates/?