
SciCheck Digest
The mRNA COVID-19 vaccines have a good safety record and have saved millions of lives. But viral posts claim the contrary, citing a recent peer-reviewed article authored by known COVID-19 misinformation spreaders and published in a controversial journal. The paper repeats previously debunked claims.
Full Story
The safety of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna is supported by the rigorous clinical trials run prior to their release and numerous studies conducted since. Hundreds of millions of people have been vaccinated in the U.S., many with multiple doses, and serious side effects are rare.

COVID-19 vaccines have also been shown to be effective in reducing the risk of severe forms of the disease. Multiple studies have estimated that the COVID-19 vaccines saved millions of lives across the globe.
But an article โ written by misinformation spreaders who oppose COVID-19 vaccination โ that claims to have reviewed the original trials and โother relevant studiesโ largely ignores this body of evidence. Instead, the review, which calls for a โglobal moratoriumโ on the mRNA vaccines, cites multiple flawed or criticized studies โ many of which weโve written about before โ to falsely claim the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines have caused โextensive, well-documentedโ serious adverse events and have killed nearly 14 times as many people as they saved.
The article was peer-reviewed and published in Cureus, an open-access online medical journal that prioritizes fast publication and has published problematic studies before, as we will explain.
Update, Feb. 19: In a Substack post, one of the paperโs authors announced that he had been informed by the journal that the editors had decided to retract the article, based on an internal review that found multiple instances of data misrepresentation and incorrect or unsubstantiated claims.
Social media posts that share the incorrect conclusions of the review have gone viral.
โmRNA COVID-19 vaccines caused more deaths than saved: study,โ reads a Feb. 4 Instagram post that shared a screenshot of a headline by the Epoch Times.
One author of the review โ as well as other social media users โ are also using the fact that the paper was published as proof that the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are unsafe.
โPeople have said Iโm a misinformation spreader because since May 2021, I have been publicly saying the COVID vaccines are not safe. Now the medical peer-reviewed literature shows I was right. Do you believe me now?โ Steve Kirsch, a review co-author and a former tech entrepreneur who lacks biomedical training, said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Jan. 30 (emphasis is his).
โ!! TRUST THE #SCIENCE !!,โ the author of a viral post wrote on Instagram on Feb. 7. The post included a screenshot of a news story titled โMainstream science mulls โglobal moratoriumโ on COVID vaccines as cancers rise, boosters flub,โ and the statement โCovid vaccines *may* cause cancer. You donโt say.โ
Just because a paper is published does not make it correct. While peer review is useful in weeding out bad science, itโs not foolproof, and the rigor and processes vary by journal. This review, which many experts have criticized, is an outlier, not โmainstream science.โ And as weโve written, thereโs no evidence mRNA COVID-19 vaccines cause cancer and resulted in millions of deaths.
Anti-Vaccine Authors and Debunked Claims
Many of the reviewโs authors have a history of spreading COVID-19 or vaccine misinformation. This includes Kirsch, who has repeatedly pushed the incorrect idea that the COVID-19 vaccines have killed millions of people worldwide, as well as Dr. Peter McCullough, Stephanie Seneff and Jessica Rose.
McCullough still recommends treating COVID-19 patients with hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, even though both have been shown not to work against the disease. He also promotes and sells โspike protein detoxificationโ products for people who have been vaccinated, despite no evidence that vaccinated people need any such detox.
Seneff is a computer scientist who has promoted the false notion that vaccines cause autism. She previously co-authored a review paper with McCullough, which the Cureus review cites, that misused data from the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System to baselessly claim the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines suppress the innate immune system, as we reported. Rose has also been accused of misusing VAERS data to claim vaccines are not safe โ a common deception among the anti-vaccination community.
The Cureus review cites and even republishes a figure from one of Roseโs Substack posts about the supposedly alarming number of VAERS reports for โautoimmune disordersโ following COVID-19 vaccination compared with influenza vaccines. The review claims the increased reporting โrepresents an immense safety signal.โ But as weโve explained before, the higher number of VAERS reports for the COVID-19 vaccines can be explained by multiple factors, such as increased awareness and stricter reporting requirements โ and does not in and of itself constitute a safety signal. A report can be submitted by anyone and does not mean that a vaccine caused a particular problem.
The review paper, titled โCOVID-19 mRNA Vaccines: Lessons Learned from the Registrational Trials and Global Vaccination Campaign,โ repeats many claims weโve already written about, based on studies or analyses that have been widely criticized or debunked.
To claim the vaccines cause โserious harms to humans,โ for example, the review draws on a problematic reanalysis of the adverse events reported in the original trials that was published in the journal Vaccine in 2022. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Dr. Joseph Ladapo, the stateโs surgeon general, have cited the paper to argue that the vaccines are too risky. But as weโve written โ and is detailed in a commentary article published in the same journal โ the paper has multiple methodological flaws, including how it counted the adverse events.
The review also uncritically cites an unpublished analysis by former physics professor Denis Rancourt that alleged that some 17 million people died from the COVID-19 vaccines. We recently explained that the report erroneously ignored deaths from COVID-19 and that such estimates are implausible. And the review recycles unsupported claims about โhigh levels of DNA contaminationโ in the mRNA vaccines and the possibility that such DNA fragments โwill integrate into the human genomeโ and cause cancer. As weโve detailed, trace amounts of residual DNA are expected in vaccines, but there is no evidence the DNA can alter a personโs DNA or cause cancer.
Finally, the review highlighted findings from a Cleveland Clinic observational study that it called the โbest evidence for the failure of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccineโs ability to confer protection against COVID-19.โ The study, which identified a correlation between more COVID-19 vaccine doses and a higher rate of testing positive for a coronavirus infection, has frequently been cited by those opposed to vaccination. But as weโve explained, the finding runs counter to that of many other studies, which have generally found increased protection with more doses. And the paper did not demonstrate that more doses actually cause an increased risk of infection. In fact, many experts suspect that the association is likely the result of other differences between people who received a different number of doses. Moreover, the primary purpose of vaccination is to protect against severe disease โ and there is abundant evidence that the COVID-19 vaccines have been very successful on that front.
โLessons learned? More like conspiracies spun,โ wrote surgical oncologist Dr. David Gorski in a post about the review in his blog Respectful Insolence.
The authors of the review have also been criticized for citing their own studies in the review and for including non-scientific publications as primary sources.
โBTW, the McCullough, Kirsch, etc. Cureus paper that is purportedly a scientific review article references trialsitetnews, epoch times, brownstone, the spectator, childrenโs health defense, and conservative review as primary sources for some of their points, as well as 11 substack articles/blogs, a youtube/twitter video, and 2 explicit anti-vaccine books, plus a large number of self-citations from the review authors,โ Jeffrey S. Morris, director of the division of biostatistics in the department of biostatistics, epidemiology and informatics at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, wrote on X on Feb. 1.
Peer Review Doesnโt Guarantee Scientific Quality
Much of the complimentary coverage of the review paper by some of the usual misinformation spreaders has emphasized that it was published in a peer-reviewed journal.
โA review paper published last week in the journal Cureus is the first peer-reviewed paper to call for a global moratorium on the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines,โ declared a Jan. 29 article published on Robert F. Kennedyโs anti-vaccine website, Childrenโs Health Defense. The story also received attention on social media.
Peer review, or the process of having fellow scientists provide feedback on a manuscript and whether it is good enough to publish, can be immensely helpful in ensuring that a given paper does not contain major flaws or errors. But peer review is only as good as the feedback provided โ and it does not automatically mean the paper can be trusted. Nor are all peer-reviewed journals the same, since each has different standards and reputations.
Cureus is unusual in that it focuses on publishing papers quickly and advertises โefficientโ peer review and a โhassle-freeโ publishing experience. The journalโs metrics for the last six months indicate that the average time from submission to publication is 33 days and that the acceptance rate is 51%. For context, the prestigious journal Nature โ which some posts have misleadingly likened Cureus to, as they share the same parent publisher โ has a median time of 267 days for submission to acceptance and an 8% acceptance rate. Per the article information for this review paper, the peer-review process took 77 days.
In 2015, responding to concerns about the journal and its fast peer-review process, the founder, president and co-editor-in-chief of Cureus, Dr. John R. Adler, said that โby design peer rejection is not a big part of our review process,โ and that the journal also relies on post-publication review to โsort out what is quality/important.โ
A paper by Emory University librarians that was presented at a 2022 conference classified Cureus as potentially โuntrustworthy or predatory.โ The journal is available on PubMed Central, the National Institutes of Healthโs database of biomedical research, but is not indexed on MEDLINE, which requires some vetting for inclusion. (A paperโs appearance in either database does not imply any kind of endorsement by the NIH.)
Cureus, notably, published two problematic studies about ivermectin for COVID-19 in 2022. As we reported at the time, the results of the studies were inconsistent with stronger studies that did not find any benefit of using ivermectin for COVID-19. Both studies had methodological flaws and were authored by ivermectin activists โ a fact that was not disclosed at the time of publication.
Although even the best journals occasionally retract published studies, Cureus has ended up multiple times in the pages of Retraction Watch, a blog and online database of retractions โ most recently on Jan. 26 for 56 studies retracted for faked authorship nearly two years after they were first flagged. In 2022, Retraction Watch reported that a study retracted by Frontiers in Medicine was later updated and published in Cureus.
Editorโs note: SciCheckโs articles providing accurate health information and correcting health misinformation are made possible by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The foundation has no control over FactCheck.orgโs editorial decisions, and the views expressed in our articles do not necessarily reflect the views of the foundation.
Sources
โSafety of COVID-19 Vaccines.โ CDC. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
โSelected Adverse Events Reported after COVID-19 Vaccinationโ. CDC. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
โCOVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness Update.โ CDC. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
Van Beusekom, Mary. โGlobal COVID vaccination saved 2.4 million lives in first 8 months, study estimates.โ CIDRAP, University of Minnesota. 31 Oct 2023.
Watson, Oliver J., et al. โGlobal impact of the first year of COVID-19 vaccination: a mathematical modelling study.โ Infectious Diseases. 23 Jun 2022.
Trang, Brittany. โCovid vaccines averted 3 million deaths in U.S., according to new study.โ Stat. 13 Dec 2022.
โCOVID-19 vaccinations have saved more than 1.4 million lives in the WHO European Region, a new study finds.โ WHO. Press release. 16 Jan 2024.
Mead, M. Nathaniel, et al. โCOVID-19 mRNA Vaccines: Lessons Learned from the Registrational Trials and Global Vaccination Campaign.โ Cureus. 24 Jan 2024.
Yandell, Kate. โTucker Carlson Video Spreads Falsehoods on COVID-19 Vaccines, WHO Accord.โ FactCheck.org. 12 Jan 2024.
Yandell, Kate. โFaulty Science Underpins Florida Surgeon Generalโs Call to Halt mRNA COVID-19 Vaccination.โ FactCheck.org. 5 Jan 2024.
Jaramillo, Catalina. โmRNA Vaccines Protect Against COVID-19 Mortality, Contrary to Misleading Posts.โ FactCheck.org. 26 May 2023.
Jaramillo, Catalina. โCOVID-19 Vaccine Benefits Outweigh Small Risks, Contrary to Flawed Claim From U.K. Cardiologist.โ FactCheck.org. 8 May 2023.
Yandell, Kate. โCleveland Clinic Study Did Not Show Vaccines Increase COVID-19 Risk.โ FactCheck.org. 16 Jun 2023.
Jaramillo, Catalina. โAutopsy Study Doesnโt Show COVID-19 Vaccines Are Unsafe.โ FactCheck.org. 21 Dec 2022.
Swann, Sara. โExperts say mRNA COVID-19 vaccines have saved millions of lives, not caused mass deaths.โ PolitiFact. 9 Feb 2024.
Wong, Adrian. โCOVID-19 mRNA Vaccines Lessons Learned Fact Check!โ Techarp. 30 Jan 2024.
Gorski, David. โAntivaxxers write about โlessons learnedโ but know nothing.โ Respectful Insolence. 26 Jan 2024.
McDonald, Jessica. โFlawed Analysis of New Zealand Data Doesnโt Show COVID-19 Vaccines Killed Millions.โ FactCheck.org. 15 Dec 2024.
Yandell, Kate. โCOVID-19 Vaccines Save Lives, Are Not More Lethal Than COVID-19.โ FactCheck.org. 6 Nov 2023.
Yandell, Kate. โPosts Push Unproven โSpike Protein Detoxificationโ Regimen.โ FactCheck.org. 21 Sep 2023.
Jaramillo, Catalina. โClinical Trials Show Ivermectin Does Not Benefit COVID-19 Patients, Contrary to Social Media Claims.โ FactCheck.org. 15 Sep 2022.
Robertson, Lori. โNo New Revelation on Hydroxychloroquine and COVID-19.โ FactCheck.org. 2 Jul 2021.
McDonald, Jessica. โCOVID-19 Vaccination Increases Immunity, Contrary to Immune Suppression Claims.โ FactCheck.org. 29 Jul 2022.
Gorski, David. โ2021: The year the weaponization of VAERS went mainstream.โ Respectful Insolence. 27 Dec 2021.
McDonald, Jessica. โWhat VAERS Can and Canโt Do, and How Anti-Vaccination Groups Habitually Misuse Its Data.โ FactCheck.org. 6 Jun 2023.
Fraiman, Joseph. โSerious adverse events of special interest following mRNA COVID-19 vaccination in randomized trials in adults.โ Vaccine. 22 Sep 2022.
McDonald, Jessica, and Catalina Jaramillo. โDeSantisโ Dubious COVID-19 Vaccine Claims.โ FactCheck.org. 2 May 2023.
Black, Steven, and Stephen Evans. โSerious adverse events following mRNA vaccination in randomized trials in adults.โ Vaccine. 26 May 2023.
Yandell, Kate. โPosts Spread False Claim About Moderna Patent Application.โ FactCheck.org. 22 Nov 2023.
Yandell, Kate. โCOVID-19 Vaccines Have Not Been Shown to Alter DNA, Cause Cancer.โ FactCheck.org. 26 Oct 2023.
Yandell, Kate. โFaulty Science Underpins Florida Surgeon Generalโs Call to Halt mRNA COVID-19 Vaccination.โ FactCheck.org. 5 Jan 2024.
Jaramillo, Catalina, and Kate Yandell. โRFK Jr.โs COVID-19 Deceptions.โ FactCheck.org. 11 Aug 2023.
Morris, Jeffrey (@jsm2334) โBTW, the McCullough, Kirsch, etc. Cureus paper that is purportedly a scientific review article references trialsitetnews, epoch times, brownstone, the spectator, childrenโs health defense, and conservative review as primary sources for some of their points, as well as 11 substack articles/blogs, a youtube/twitter video, and 2 explicit anti-vaccine books, plus a large number of self-citations from the review authors.โ X. 1 Feb 2024.
โScrutinizing science: Peer review.โ Understanding Science 101. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
Crossley, Merlin. โWhen to trust (and not to trust) peer reviewed science.โ The Conversation. 12 Jul 2018.
โReviewer Guide.โ Cureus. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
โAbout Cureus.โ Cureus. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
โJournal Metrics.โ Nature. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
โEditorial criteria and processes.โ Nature. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
Sparks, Katie, and Kimberly R. Powell. โAssessing Predatory Journal Publishing Within Health Sciences Authors.โ SLA conference. 31 Jul 2022.
โMEDLINE, PubMed, and PMC (PubMed Central): How are they different?โ NIH. 28 Dec 2023.
โDisclaimer.โ National Library of Medicine. Accessed 15 Feb 2024.
โSome Strange Goings On at Cureus.โ Emerald City Journal. 20 Aug 2016.
Oransky, Ivan. โJournal retracts more than 50 studies from Saudi Arabia for faked authorship.โ Retraction Watch. 26 Jan 2024.
Kincaid, Ellie. โResearcher attacks journal for retracting his paper on COVID-19 drug.โ Retraction Watch. 26 Jan 2024. 10 Jun 2022.
Jaramillo, Catalina. โEvidence Still Lacking to Support Ivermectin as Treatment for COVID-19.โ FactCheck.org. 6 Jun 2022.
Jaramillo, Catalina. โClinical Trials Show Ivermectin Does Not Benefit COVID-19 Patients, Contrary to Social Media Claims.โ FactCheck.org. 15 Sep 2022.
Kerr, Lucy, et al. โCorrection: Ivermectin Prophylaxis Used for COVID-19: A Citywide, Prospective, Observational Study of 223,128 Subjects Using Propensity Score Matching.โ Cureus. 24 Mar 2022.


