Europe Sounds Alarm as Birth Rates Plunge Among …

Alarming official data in Europe has revealed that a devastating drop in birth rates is only impacting women who received Covid mRNA “vaccines.”

A growing body of data is fueling alarm after researchers uncovered a steep and unexplained drop in birth rates across Europe.

The evidence reveals a powerful direct correlation between the rollout of Covid injections and severely declining fertility.

In the Czech Republic, birth rates began plunging sharply in January 2022.

By the end of the year, it became undeniable: the country’s total fertility rate (TFR) had collapsed.

Worryingly, the data shows that birth rates continued plummeting through 2024.

And it wasn’t just in the Czech Republic.

Similar patterns were observed in the Netherlands, Norway, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Sweden, all countries that had aggressively promoted mass Covid “vaccination” campaigns.

What sets the Czech data apart is that it now includes an unprecedented official breakdown of births by the mother’s “vaccination” status.

Released only after repeated Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests and political pressure, the data provides the clearest view yet into what happened.

According to the figures, women who had received at least one Covid “vaccine” dose prior to giving birth conceived about one-third fewer children than would be expected based on their share of the population.

Unvaccinated women, by contrast, conceived at rates consistent with pre-pandemic trends.

The trend coincided almost precisely with the timeline of mass Covid vaccination campaigns.

Despite claims that the drop in fertility was due to demographics, the TFR, a measure that corrects for age and population, dropped sharply only after widespread “vaccine” rollout.

Even more striking, the data reveals that “vaccinated” women who became pregnant during or after vaccination saw disproportionately lower conception rates, suggesting a biological or environmental factor may be at play.

While critics of the official narrative have long raised concerns about the unknown effects of mRNA “vaccines” on fertility, this newly released dataset appears to back their warnings with hard numbers.

The Czech data is now publicly available and includes a breakdown by month and vaccination status for women aged 18–39.

The findings raise serious questions:

Why did the fertility rate only fall among vaccinated women?

Why did the timing align so closely with vaccine rollout?

If the vaccines were unrelated, why did the TFR across entire countries drop so suddenly and dramatically, and continue falling?

Meanwhile, corporate media and government health officials have largely ignored or downplayed the data.

Explanations pointing to stress, demographics, or even war in Ukraine fail to account for the timing and specificity of the decline, which overwhelmingly affected only the “vaccinated.”

Data from other European countries echoes the Czech findings.

Sweden, Slovakia, and the Netherlands all saw their fertility rates take sharp downturns in 2022.

In contrast, countries with lower vaccine uptake or delayed rollouts saw more stable trends.

Despite repeated attempts, researchers have been denied access to more granular data from many Western governments.

Meanwhile, multiple top scientific journals rejected this study without review.

Critics are now asking whether global health authorities are deliberately suppressing findings that challenge their narrative.

With Europe facing a demographic crisis of historic proportions, questions about the long-term impact of mass vaccination campaigns are only growing louder.

If fertility continues to collapse at the current pace, the implications for population sustainability, economic stability, and national security will be profound.

And if these declines are indeed linked to the vaccines, as the data suggests, the fallout could dwarf the initial crisis the shots were supposedly intended to prevent.

READ MORE – Life Expectancy of Covid-Vaxxed Plunges by 30 Years

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My name is Steve Allen and I’m the publisher of ThinkAboutIt.online. Any controversial opinions in these articles are either mine alone or a guest author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the websites where my work is republished. These articles may contain opinions on political matters, but are not intended to promote the candidacy of any particular political candidate. The material contained herein is for general information purposes only. Commenters are solely responsible for their own viewpoints, and those viewpoints do not necessarily represent the viewpoints of the operators of the websites where my work is republished. Follow me on social media on Facebook and X, and sharing these articles with others is a great help. Thank you, Steve

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