Hospital Issues Emergency Alert as Deadly Brain Tumors Surge Among Covid-Vaxxed Nurses

A Boston hospital has launched an emergency investigation after at least ten of the facility’s Covid-vaccinated nurses have suddenly been diagnosed with deadly brain tumors.
The alarming spike in brain tumors at Newton-Wellesley Hospital has ignited urgent calls for a full-scale investigation into potential causes.
CBS News first reported that at least ten nurses had been diagnosed with brain tumors.
Some of the tumors were malignant, others benign, with three requiring surgery.
However, accounts from hospital staff suggest the number of confirmed cases may be higher.
A nurse who worked at Newton-Wellesley for nearly a decade and was recently diagnosed with a brain tumour revealed that at least 17 individuals had come forward and were undergoing assessment.
This higher estimate has also been supported by the Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA).
The MNA notes that more nurses have raised concerns since the story emerged.
“We are speaking with many, many more nurses and gathering their medical records,” an MNA representative stated, reinforcing the growing concerns.
It remains uncertain whether these cases meet the statistical threshold for a formal “cancer cluster.”
Nevertheless, the rising reports have intensified demands for a deeper inquiry.
Meanwhile, the Newton-Wellesley Hospital, part of the Mass General Brigham network, is attempting to downplay the surge.
Hospital officials insist that the sudden spike in brain tumor diagnoses is merely a coincidence.
In collaboration with the Department of Occupational Health and Safety, the hospital launched an investigation, which concluded there was no connection between the cases.
“The investigation found no environmental risks linked to the development of brain tumours,” the hospital announced.
“We can confidently reassure our dedicated team members and all our patients that there is no environmental risk at our facility.”
The MNA, however, found the hospital’s efforts lacking.
The union described the investigation as “completely inadequate.”
The MNA has now launched its own emergency inquiry to explore the issue further.
“We’re seeing reports of different types of brain tumours,” the MNA representative explained.
“There may be environmental hazards, past or present, such as asbestos exposure or radiation…
“It’s too early to rule anything out.”
Beyond environmental concerns, speculation has emerged regarding a potential link to Covid mRNA “vaccines.”
Like many institutions across the country, Newton-Wellesley Hospital enforced a Covid “vaccine” mandate.
Due to the hospital’s strict rules, all of the facility’s nurses are “vaccinated” for Covid, including the ones diagnosed with brain tumors.
It is prompting serious questions about whether the Covid injections are linked to the tumor cases.
The MNA, representing 25,000 nurses across 85 Massachusetts healthcare facilities, has dismissed any link to vaccination, however.
The union, which supported the “vaccine” mandates, argues that the cases are unrelated to the mRNA shots.
“This is the only facility where we’re experiencing anything like this,” the MNA representative insisted.
The MNA argues that environmental factors are a more plausible explanation.
However, Professor Wafik El-Deiry, a leading cancer researcher at Brown University, asserts that all possibilities must be examined.
“They need to gather full medical histories, vaccine records, and detailed pathology reports of the tumors,” he explained.
“It’s critical to analyse blood and tissue samples for the presence of spike protein and other potential markers to determine if these cancers share molecular signatures.”
Given the relatively short timeframe in which these tumors have emerged and concentrated at the same location, some have speculated that nurses at Newton-Wellesley may have received a “bad batch” of mRNA injections.
Batch variability has previously been linked to differences in adverse events.
A Danish study published in the European Journal of Clinical Investigation found that serious side effects were strongly associated with specific batches of Pfizer’s Covid “vaccine.”
El-Deiry has advocated for “full next-generation sequencing (NGS) on tumour biopsies” to identify “potentially causative DNA fingerprints and unique RNA expression patterns.”
Recent studies have also detected cancer-causing plasmid DNA contamination in mRNA “vaccines.”
Several independent laboratories have now reported the presence of an SV40 promoter in Pfizer’s product.
The SV40 promoter is linked to cancer formation in animal studies and is able to facilitate the nuclear import of plasmid DNA contamination, potentially integrating into the host genome and disrupting oncogenes.
Whether this emerging trend represents a genuine public health crisis or an unfortunate coincidence, all plausible explanations—environmental, viral, or vaccine-related—must be rigorously investigated.
For now, the affected nurses continue to seek answers.
The hospital’s assurances have failed to ease concerns, with many staff feeling unsupported as uncertainty mounts.
El-Deiry, a leading contender for the position of Director at the National Cancer Institute, has called for an urgent, transparent, and unbiased inquiry into the situation at Newton-Wellesley Hospital.
“If we fail to fully investigate this phenomenon, we may miss a critical opportunity to uncover new insights into cancer causation—and potentially prevent further cases from emerging.”
He says that local hospitals and state agencies may have limited expertise to conduct such a thorough investigation, suggesting that independent oversight is required.
“The state or federal government health departments would need to step in,” El-Deiry noted.
He concluded by suggesting it “may take someone like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to demand a full-scale inquiry.”