by Dr.Harald Wiesendanger– Klartext
What the mainstream media is hiding
A six-year-old girl died in Texas after contracting measles. Since then, “quality media” have exploited the tragic case to stoke infection panic and push for vaccinations. Without doing any research, they have swept under the rug the true cause of death.

On February 26, a six-year-old girl named Kaylee died at Covenant Children’s Hospital in Lubbock, Texas – allegedly from measles, for which she had not been vaccinated. This culminated in “the largest outbreak in 30 years,” the news channel N-TV reported. Vox, the Washington Post, and the New York Times predicted an “impending public health emergency.” (More details in KLARTEXT “Measles Horror – Again.”)
What data is supposed to scare America?
By the end of the third week of March, 377 people across the United States had contracted measles, 325 of them in rural West Texas. The fact that 376 cases apparently had a mild outcome was not worth mentioning to any editorial staff. No, it was nothing less than fatal. A single piece of supposed evidence was used as evidence for this: Kaylee’s coffin.
But what did the girl really die of?
In an interview with CHD.TV, the online television channel of Children’s Health Defense, Kaylee’s parents clarified: When their daughter arrived at the hospital, the measles rash had already cleared up. The reason for admission was, in fact, severe shortness of breath. What caused this? After analyzing Kaylee’s medical records, the renowned intensive care physician Dr. Pierre Kory concluded: The girl died of secondary bacterial pneumonia, which “had little to do with measles.” Because “such pneumonia can occur after any viral infection. [The girl] died because of a medical error—and that error was the use of an antibiotic [that was completely unsuitable for treating the type of pneumonia the little girl had].”
Mistreated Pneumonia
To target any type of bacterial pneumonia, doctors typically prescribe two antibiotics. “That’s in all the guidelines,” says Kory. “One antibiotic belongs to the beta-lactam category, which includes penicillin and cephalosporins. And [the hospital] did that part right. They gave the girl something called ceftriaxone, which was excellent. But you always have to combine it with an antibiotic from another category, namely a macrolide or a quinolone.” This was precisely what was neglected. “They didn’t give her the most common antibiotic, azithromycin,” Kory said. Instead, she was given vancomycin, an antibiotic used for highly drug-resistant organisms like MRSA. And this decision was completely inappropriate.
And that wasn’t enough: The little girl didn’t receive the correct antibiotic until about two and a half days later. And there was apparently another fatal delay: more than nine hours passed between the time the correct medication was finally ordered and the time it was finally administered.
By then, Kaylee’s condition had worsened so much that the doctors decided to put her on a ventilator. They informed the parents that they could not stay with their child and would not be able to visit her again until the next day. “They just told us they were renting a hotel nearby, and we should spend the night there.” Because the room [in the hospital] was very small, and there was nothing in it for us to sleep on. There were just two chairs in one corner.”
They would never see Kaylee alive again.
“A short time later, she died—in a pretty catastrophic way,” Kory states. “Suddenly, her blood pressure plummeted, and she went into cardiac arrest.”
A Chain of Medical Malpractice
Could the artificial respiration ultimately contributed to the tragedy? In the US alone, tens of thousands of patients fell victim to it during the coronavirus pandemic, as a study published in 2023 shows.
In short, there is much evidence to suggest that the little girl’s death was the result of a chain of medical malpractice – the third leading cause of death in the US.
The public was never informed of these circumstances. Instead of holding the negligent clinicians accountable, the mass media pilloried the stunned parents: Because they irresponsibly left Kaylee unvaccinated, they were to blame for her death – shame on them.
Kaylee’s parents had refrained from vaccinating her for religious reasons: They belong to the Mennonite faith community, an evangelical church where vaccine skepticism prevails. Vaccinations are considered an interference with God’s plan; diseases are sent by God, and one must not go against His will. And so the measles panic in the United States is leading to a great deal of hatred and incitement against Mennonites. “But it’s not just us who have measles,” a frustrated spokesperson clarifies.
Authorities are concealing effective treatments.
Likewise, mainstream media outlets fail to mention what happened to Kaylee’s four siblings, ages two to seven. They, too, had contracted measles, and they, too, had not been vaccinated against it. Starting on March 2, a week after Kaylee’s death, they were cared for by their family doctor, Dr. Ben Edwards, who runs a private practice with around 2,000 patients. He wrote each child a prescription for budesonide, a steroid inhalant normally used for asthma but which can be “very helpful for inflamed airways” in the case of measles, he explains. He also gave the children cod liver oil “because it’s the best form of vitamin A. (…) Vitamin A deficiency greatly worsens measles. The measles infection itself leads to a deficiency of retinol, or vitamin A.” Cod liver oil also provides ample vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids.
Shortly thereafter, “all the children had recovered well and quickly,” the parents confirmed with relief.
Kaylee hadn’t received any of these treatments. The New York Times and other newspapers reported that their effectiveness was “unproven.”
Praise, however, came from the highest levels. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the new U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and (mostly) vaccine skeptic, recently strongly welcomed the use of “unconventional treatment methods” against the recent measles outbreak in West Texas, saying that doctors there had achieved “very, very good” results with such treatments.
The dead girl’s parents, of all people, still share this assessment. “Don’t get the shot!” Kaylee’s mother pleaded in an interview. “There are doctors who can help with measles in other ways. They’re nowhere near as bad as the media makes them out to be.”
Insane recommendation from the health department
Dr. Edwards reports that he contacted the Texas Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS), the top health authority in Texas. He tried to persuade the DSHS to recommend budesonide as a possible treatment for acute respiratory distress following a measles infection. The response: The state’s only recommendation regarding measles is the MMR vaccine.
And what if an unvaccinated person has already been infected?
For such cases, Texas health officials are instructed to administer a dose of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine within 72 hours of exposure to the measles virus “to reduce the severity of the illness.”
This approach is extremely dangerous, warns Dr. Mary Talley Bowden, an otolaryngologist near Houston. Doesn’t the package insert for Merck’s MMRII, the most widely administered measles vaccine, already indicate that vaccination is contraindicated for pregnant women, immunocompromised individuals, or those with fever? “MMRII should never be given to anyone battling an infection—especially measles,” Bowden says. “The vaccine can cause complications similar to the disease itself, including rash, fever, encephalitis, and idiopathic thrombotic purpura” (ITP), a serious autoimmune disease in which antibodies are produced against the body’s own platelets—leading to a clotting disorder that can cause bruising and pinpoint bleeding of the skin and mucous membranes.
MMR vaccines are more dangerous than the infection they are intended to protect against
Wouldn’t it be the responsibility of a health authority to accompany a vaccination recommendation with warnings? MMR vaccines pose serious health risks. Boys who receive their first MMR vaccination at 12 to 15 months of age are 67% more likely to develop autism than boys who are not vaccinated until after their third birthday. In addition, the MMR vaccine causes febrile seizures, anaphylaxis, meningitis, encephalitis, thrombocytopenia, arthralgia, and vasculitis.
Over the past decade, 41 deaths following MMR or MMRV vaccination have been reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), the US reporting system for adverse vaccine reactions established in 1990. Considering the unfortunate phenomenon of underreporting—only 1 to 5% of all cases are actually recorded—it is likely that several thousand MMR vaccine deaths have occurred in the United States alone. How many measles victims were there during the same period? Two in 2015 and one in 2019. But did these three, like Kaylee, perhaps only die of measles, not because of it?
And this, too, is something that “quality media” tends to quietly ignore: After a cure for measles, mental and physical development spurts often occur before the eyes of astonished parents. Medical case reports and studies confirm: Children are subsequently less susceptible to other infectious diseases as well. The risk of later allergies, multiple sclerosis, and even cancer decreases, as does the likelihood of eventually developing atopy, Crohn’s disease, or ulcerative colitis – not to mention autism.
Can journalistic curiosity ignore the question: How did the outbreak even occur? MMR vaccines are so-called live vaccines; they contain weakened amounts of the measles virus. According to a 2024 study, one-third of children who receive the vaccine subsequently excrete the live virus – which could contribute to outbreaks. In this way, the vaccination mafia creates supposed emergencies, the risky treatment of which ensures their profits.
(Harald Wiesendanger)
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Notes
(1) https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article-abstract/123/3/771/71635/Allergic-Disease-and-Atopic-Sensitization-in?redirectedFrom=fulltext ; https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S030698779890055X?via%3Dihub; https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article-abstract/123/3/771/71635/Allergic-Disease-and-Atopic-Sensitization-in?redirectedFrom=fulltext
Photo: Still from a Children’s Health Defense interview with Kaylee’s parents. Cross: Freepik.