Researchers' Claims on COVID-19 Vaccines: Risks to Fertility and Future Generations
Originally published: 2025-08-31
The discussion around COVID-19 vaccines, especially mRNA-based ones, continues to evolve. Organizations like the CDC and WHO, representing the controlling faction of allopathy and the administrative state, assert that these vaccines do not affect fertility or transmit spike proteins to offspring conceived years later, citing studies showing no changes in sperm parameters, ovarian function, or pregnancy outcomes.
However, many no longer trust these institutions due to conflicts of interest and inconsistencies in their guidance. In contrast, various researchers and commentators have presented findings suggesting mechanisms like lipid nanoparticle accumulation in reproductive organs or genomic integration could lead to harms, including to babies born after vaccination. These claims often reference autopsies, animal studies, preprints, and observational data.
"If I were a woman in fertile age, I would not plan a motherhood from a person, from a man, who has been vaccinated." — Prof. Dr. Arne Burkhardt, Pathologist
Key Researchers and Their Findings
Researchers from medical and scientific fields have shared observations on vaccine effects related to reproduction.
Prof. Dr. Arne Burkhardt: Autopsy Findings in Reproductive Tissues
Burkhardt, a German pathologist, examined autopsies of vaccinated individuals and found that spike protein replaces sperm in the testes. He claims this impacts fertility and poses risks to offspring. His analysis, based on tissue samples, indicates systemic damage with potential transgenerational implications.
"The vaccines damage fertility. Is this part of a depopulation agenda or ‘just’ a terrible mistake?" — Dr. Tess Lawrie, Physician and Researcher
Nicolas Hulscher: Placental Crossing and Genomic Integration
Hulscher, an epidemiologist with the McCullough Foundation, found that mRNA from vaccines crosses the placenta within one hour, accumulates in fetal tissues, and translates into spike protein that persists after birth. He claims this leads to transgenerational harms, including excess mortality in babies and passage of "non-human spike-producing code" via genomic integration.
Dr. Kevin McCairn: Evidence from Prenatal Exposure Cases
McCairn, a neuroscientist, detected amyloid fibrils linked to spike protein in a 3-year-old child exposed in utero to mRNA vaccines. The child, born shortly after the mother's vaccination, required resuscitation and developed chronic illnesses, which McCairn attributes to persistent effects with risks extending to future generations.
Taiwanese Researchers: Placental Transmission in Animal Models
In a 2025 preprint, Taiwanese scientists administered Moderna's mRNA-1273 vaccine to pregnant mice and found synthetic spike protein and polyethylene glycol crossing the placenta within 30 minutes, persisting in fetal circulation for at least 7 days. They claim this raises genotoxicity risks, including genome integration, oncogenesis, and germline transmission to offspring, with mRNA retained in fetal livers and spleens.
"People who have received COVID-19 vaccinations can 'shed' the vaccination payloads they received to people who are unvaccinated."
Dr. Mary Talley Bowden: Distribution to Organs
Bowden found spike protein persisting up to 6 months or longer and distributing to reproductive organs. She claims this raises risks for conception years later.
Dr. Byram Bridle: Biodistribution Data
Bridle analyzed Pfizer's biodistribution studies showing lipid nanoparticles accumulating in ovaries and testes. He claims repeated doses could affect sperm and eggs, with potential long-term reproductive consequences.
"Up to 80% of the unvaccinated have the COVID-19 vaccine, the spike protein, and the synthetic mRNA." — Mark Aubry, Impact Health
Dr. Jessica Rose: Health Effects from Data Analysis
Rose, a data analyst, reviewed VAERS reports and found vaccines causing conditions including fertility issues. She claims underreporting hides reproductive harms.
Drs. Pierre Kory, Paul Marik, and Scott Marsland: Shedding Mechanisms
These FLCCC members discussed vaccine component shedding finding transmission to unvaccinated individuals. They claim this affects fertility through exposure.
Supporting Animal Studies and Preprints
Animal data, such as rat studies showing ovarian impacts and mouse models of placental crossing, indicate possible delayed effects on reproduction.
Broader Implications
These findings and claims call for further investigation into long-term vaccine effects. As of August 2025, these discussions continue to contrast with official positions from institutions many view with skepticism.

