Shock Report: Officials Knew Vaccine Heart Risk EARLY, Delayed Warning For Months
Did U.S. health officials know about a serious health risk from the COVID-19 vaccine much earlier than the public was told?
A bombshell new report from a Senate investigation suggests exactly that.
Key Senate Investigation Uncovers Alleged Delays
The report comes from the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin.
Sen. Johnson has long been vocal about seeking transparency regarding COVID-19 vaccine safety and efficacy data.
He previously subpoenaed the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to obtain records related to the vaccines.
According to the interim report, reviewed by Fox News Digital, these records contain evidence suggesting the Biden administration “withheld crucial health information.”
Years of Unanswered Questions?
The report highlights over 70 oversight letters Sen. Johnson says he sent since 2021, which he claims were ignored or inadequately addressed.
The subpoenaed documents, totaling over 2,400 pages, form the basis of the report’s key findings.
Specifically, the investigation focused on HHS’s awareness and response to cases of myocarditis following COVID-19 vaccination.

Myocarditis is a type of heart inflammation.
The report alleges the Biden administration made “efforts to downplay and delay warning the public” about this specific risk associated with the mRNA vaccines.
Early Signals Allegedly Downplayed
The investigation points to records from as early as May 2021.
These records reportedly show health officials within HHS discussing whether a formal warning about myocarditis should be issued.
Initially, a nationwide Health Alert Network message was considered.
This type of message is a primary method for the CDC to share urgent public health information widely.

However, the report claims officials at the CDC and FDA ultimately decided against this formal alert.
Instead, they opted to post “clinical considerations” on the CDC’s website.
The report argues this was a deliberate decision to delay informing the public about the risk.
International Warnings and Internal Data
The report also highlights that the Israeli Ministry of Health had already notified the CDC in February 2021 about “large reports of myocarditis” following the Pfizer vaccine, particularly in young people.
Furthermore, documents obtained show CDC officials discussing “safety signals” for myocarditis in April 2021, based on data from the Defense Department and Israel.

Despite this information, the report states immediate steps to warn the public were not taken.
Internal draft notes from late May 2021 reportedly show U.S. officials asking if the VAERS system was signaling for myopericarditis, with the answer being yes for certain young age groups (16-17 and 18-24).

VAERS stands for the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System.
The Report’s Stark Allegation
According to the report, the decision by the Biden administration to “downplay the COVID-19 vaccine health risks and delay warning the public about cardiac-related adverse events associated with the mRNA vaccines jeopardized the public’s health.”
Instead of providing immediate, transparent information, the report states officials waited months.

The Big Reveal: When the Public Was Finally Told
Despite allegedly knowing about the risk months earlier and discussing formal warnings in May 2021, the Biden administration did not announce changes to the labels for the Moderna and Pfizer COVID-19 vaccines based on the “suggested increased risks” of myocarditis and pericarditis until late June 2021.
That’s a delay of over a month from internal discussions about warnings, and significantly longer from when international and internal data reportedly showed safety signals.

Calls for Full Transparency
The report also includes startling statistics from VAERS, noting over 38,000 deaths and 1.6 million adverse events worldwide associated with COVID-19 injections as of April 25.
It highlights that 25% of these deaths occurred within 0-2 days post-injection, a statistic the report contrasts with the 2,663 deaths reported to VAERS for the flu vaccine over 35 years.
The report concludes by demanding that the “full extent” of this alleged failure to warn the public be exposed.
It argues that information held by federal health agencies, funded by taxpayers, belongs to the American people and should be fully transparently available.
As more documents become public, the Senate Subcommittee intends to continue providing transparency.