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The ex-Pfizer scientist who became an anti-vax hero

   The ex-Pfizer scientist who became an anti-vax hero  

Retired scientist Michael Yeadon.


Michael Yeadon was a scientific researcher and vice president at drugs giant Pfizer Inc. He co-founded a successful biotech. Then his career took an unexpected turn.


By STEVE STECKLOW and ANDREW MACASKILL in LONDON Filed March 18, 2021, 11 a.m. GMT

Late last year, a semi-retired British scientist co-authored a petition to Europe’s medicines regulator. The petitioners made a bold demand: Halt COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials.


Even bolder was their argument for doing so: They speculated, without providing evidence, that the vaccines could cause infertility in women.


The document appeared on a German website on Dec.1. Scientists denounced the theory. Regulators weren’t swayed, either: Weeks later, the European Medicines Agency approved the European Union’s first COVID-19 shot, co-developed by Pfizer Inc. But damage was already done.


Social media quickly spread exaggerated claims that COVID-19 jabs cause female infertility. Within weeks, doctors and nurses in Britain began reporting that concerned women were asking them whether it was true, according to the Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists. In January, a survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), a non-profit organization, found that 13% of unvaccinated people in the United States had heard that “COVID-19 vaccines have been shown to cause infertility.”


What gave the debunked claim credibility was that one of the petition’s co-authors, Michael Yeadon, wasn’t just any scientist. The 60-year-old is a former vice president of Pfizer, where he spent 16 years as an allergy and respiratory researcher. He later co-founded a biotech firm that the Swiss drugmaker Novartis purchased for at least $325 million.



The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was the first COVID-19 shot to be authorized for use in the European Union. REUTERS/Marko Djurica

“These claims are false, dangerous and deeply irresponsible.”


A spokesman for Britain’s Department of Health & Social Care

In recent months, Yeadon (pronounced Yee-don) has emerged as an unlikely hero of the so-called anti-vaxxers, whose adherents question the safety of many vaccines, including for the coronavirus. The anti-vaxxer movement has amplified Yeadon’s skeptical views about COVID-19 vaccines and tests, government-mandated lockdowns and the arc of the pandemic. Yeadon has said he personally doesn’t oppose the use of all vaccines. But many health experts and government officials worry that opinions like his fuel vaccine hesitancy – a reluctance or refusal to be vaccinated – that could prolong the pandemic. COVID-19 has already killed more than 2.6 million people worldwide.


“These claims are false, dangerous and deeply irresponsible,” said a spokesman for Britain’s Department of Health & Social Care, when asked about Yeadon’s views. “COVID-19 vaccines are the best way to protect people from coronavirus and will save thousands of lives.”


Recent reports of blood clots and abnormal bleeding in a small number of recipients of AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine have cast doubt on that shot’s safety, leading several European countries to suspend its use. The developments are likely to fuel vaccine hesitancy further, although there is no evidence of a causative link between the AstraZeneca product and the affected patients’ conditions.


Yeadon didn’t respond to requests for comment for this article. In reporting this story, Reuters reviewed thousands of his tweets over the past two years, along with other writings and statements. It also interviewed five people who know him, including four of his former colleagues at Pfizer.


A Pfizer spokesman declined to comment on Yeadon and his stint with the company, beyond emphasizing that there is no evidence that its vaccine, which it developed with its German partner BioNTech, causes infertility in women.


References to Yeadon’s petition appear on the website of a group founded by influential vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr., scion of the American political dynasty, who recently was banned on Instagram because of his COVID-19 vaccine posts. Syndicated writer and vaccine skeptic Michelle Malkin reported Yeadon’s concern about fertility in a column last month under the headline, “Pregnant Women: Beware of COVID Shots.” And a blog with an alarmist headline – “Head of Pfizer Research: Covid vaccine is female sterilization” – was shared thousands of times on Facebook.



Robert F. Kennedy Jr., pictured in 2016, was recently banned on Instagram because of his COVID-19 vaccine posts. REUTERS/Stephanie Keith

The visage and views of Yeadon, widely identified as an “Ex-VP of Pfizer,’’ can be seen on social media in languages including German, Portuguese, Danish and Czech. A Facebook post carries a video from November in which Yeadon claimed that the pandemic “fundamentally… is over.” The post has been viewed more than a million times.


In October, Yeadon wrote a column for the United Kingdom’s Daily Mail newspaper that also appeared on MailOnline, one of the world’s most-visited news websites. It declared that deaths caused by COVID-19, which then totaled about 45,000 in Britain, will soon “fizzle out” and Britons “should immediately be allowed to resume normal life.” Since then, the disease has killed about another 80,000 people in the UK.


Yeadon isn’t the only respected scientist to have challenged the scientific consensus on COVID-19 and expressed controversial views.


Michael Levitt, a winner of the Nobel Prize for chemistry, told the Stanford Daily last summer that he expected the pandemic would end in the United States in 2020 and kill no more than 175,000 Americans – a third of the current total – and “when we come to look back, we’re going to say that wasn’t such a terrible disease.” And Luc Montagnier, another Nobel Prize winner, said last year that he believed the coronavirus was created in a Chinese lab. Many experts doubt that, but so far there is no way to prove or disprove it.


Levitt told Reuters that his projections about the pandemic in the United States were wrong, but he still believes COVID-19 eventually won’t be seen as “a terrible disease” and that lockdowns “caused a great deal of collateral damage and may not have been needed.” Montagnier didn’t respond to a request for comment.


What gives Yeadon particular credibility is the fact that he worked at Pfizer, says Imran Ahmed, chief executive of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, an organization that combats online misinformation. “Yeadon’s background gives his dangerous and harmful messages false credibility.”



Michael Levitt, a winner of the Nobel Prize for chemistry, believes COVID-19 eventually won’t be seen as a terrible disease and that lockdowns “may not have been needed.” REUTERS/Stephen Lam


Dr. Luc Montagnier, who won a Nobel Prize for his part in discovering HIV, said last year he believes the coronavirus was created in a Chinese lab. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

In a debate last fall in Britain’s House of Commons about the government’s response to the pandemic, parliamentarian Richard Drax called Yeadon an “eminent” scientist, and cited his view “that the virus is both manageable and nearing its end.” Drax didn’t respond to a request for comment.


More recently, David Kurten, a member of the London Assembly – an elected body – tweeted there is a “real danger” that COVID-19 vaccines could leave women infertile. “The ‘cure’ must not be worse than the ‘disease’,” Kurten wrote. He, too, didn’t respond to a request for comment.


Why Yeadon transformed from mainstream scientist to COVID-19 vaccine skeptic remains a mystery. Thousands of his tweets stretching back to the start of the pandemic document a dramatic shift in his views – early on, he supported a vaccine strategy. But they offer few clues to explain his radical turnabout.


Some former colleagues at Pfizer say they no longer recognize the Mike Yeadon they once knew. They described him as a knowledgeable and intelligent man who always insisted on seeing evidence and generally avoided publicity.


One of those ex-colleagues is Sterghios A. Moschos, who holds degrees in molecular biology and pharmaceutics. In December, Yeadon posted on Twitter a spoof sign that said, “DITCH THE MASK.” Moschos tweeted back: “Mike what hell ?! Are you out to actively kill people? You do realize that if you are wrong, your suggestions will result in deaths ??”



A Twitter exchange between Michael Yeadon and a former Pfizer colleague from December 2020. Twitter/Screenshot

“It’ll all fade away”


Yeadon joined Twitter in October 2018 and soon became a prolific user of the platform. The thousands of his tweets reviewed by Reuters were provided by archive.org, which stores web pages, and FollowersAnalysis, a social media analytics company.


When the coronavirus pandemic reached the UK in March 2020, Yeadon initially expressed support for developing a vaccine. He tweeted: “Covid 19 is not going away. Until we have a vaccine or herd immunity” – natural resistance resulting from prior exposure to the virus – “all that can be done is to slow its spread.” A week later he tweeted: “A vaccine might be along towards the end of 2021, if we’re really lucky.”


When a fellow Twitter user said vaccines “harm many, many people,” Yeadon replied: “Ok, please refuse it, but do not impede its flow to neutrals or those keen to get it, thanks.”


After Mathai Mammen, the global head of research & development for Janssen, the pharmaceutical division of Johnson & Johnson, posted on LinkedIn last summer that his company had started clinical trials of a vaccine, Yeadon responded: “Lovely to see this milestone, Mathai!” Mammen didn’t respond to a request for comment.


But as early as April, Yeadon had begun voicing unorthodox views.


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While Britain was still in its first lockdown last spring, he declared: “there is nothing especially virulent or frightening about covid 19 … it’ll all fade away … Just a common & garden virus, to which the world overreacted.” And he predicted in a subsequent tweet that it was “unlikely” the death toll in the UK would reach 40,000.


By September 2020, Yeadon’s statements were attracting attention beyond Twitter. At the time, a movement had emerged in Britain against lockdowns and other restrictions meant to curb the disease. He co-authored a lengthy article on a website called Lockdown Sceptics. It declared that the “pandemic as an event in the UK is essentially complete.” And, “There is no biological principle that leads us to expect a second wave.” Britain soon entered a much more deadly second wave.


On Oct. 16, he wrote another lengthy article for the same website: “There is absolutely no need for vaccines to extinguish the pandemic. I’ve never heard such nonsense talked about vaccines. You do not vaccinate people who aren’t at risk from a disease.”


In November, Yeadon appeared in a 32-minute video for the anti-lockdown group, Unlocked, sitting in a shed with a motorbike behind him. A shorter version appeared on Facebook titled, “The pandemic is over.”


Yeadon called for an end to mass testing and claimed that 30% of the population was already immune to COVID-19 even before the pandemic started. By the time of the recording, he said, there was little scope for the virus to spread further in the UK because most people had already been infected or were immune.


Those views ran counter to the findings of the World Health Organization. In December – nine months after declaring the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic – the agency said testing suggested that less than 10% of the world’s population had shown evidence of infection.


Yeadon’s petition to the European Medicines Agency to halt vaccine trials followed on Dec. 1. The agency didn’t respond to requests for comment for this article.



In late 2020, Michael Yeadon co-authored a petition to the European Medicines Agency, a regulator, to halt COVID-19 vaccine trials. Above, the agency’s headquarters in Amsterdam. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw

“This does not sound like the guy I knew 20 years ago.”


Mark Treherne, who worked with Michael Yeadon at Pfizer

It’s impossible to measure the impact of Yeadon’s claim that COVID-19 vaccines could cause female infertility. Anecdotally, though, many women have bought into it.


Bonnie Jacobson, a waitress in Brooklyn, New York, can’t recall where she first heard about the fertility issue. But she told Reuters that it has made her hesitant to take a vaccine, as she’d like to have children “sooner than later.”


“That’s my main concern,” she said. “Let more research come out.” After recently declining to get vaccinated, she said, the tavern where she worked fired her. Jacobson’s employer didn’t respond to a request for comment.


A good scientist


According to Yeadon’s LinkedIn profile, he joined Pfizer in 1995;  the company had a large operation then in Sandwich in southern England. He rose to become a vice president and head of allergy and respiratory research.


Many former colleagues say they are baffled by his transformation.


Mark Treherne, chairman of Talisman Therapeutics in Cambridge, England, said he overlapped with Yeadon at Pfizer for about two years and sometimes had coffee with him. “He always seemed knowledgeable, intelligible, a good scientist. We were both trained as pharmacologists … so we had something in common.”


“I obviously disagree with Mike and his recent views,” he said. Treherne’s company is researching brain inflammation, which he said could be triggered by coronaviruses. “This does not sound like the guy I knew 20 years ago.”


Moschos, the ex-colleague who took issue with one of Yeadon’s tweets, said he considered him a mentor when they worked together at the drugmaker from 2008 to 2011. More recently, Moschos has been researching whether it’s possible to test for COVID-19 with breath samples. He said Yeadon’s views are “a huge disappointment.” He recounted hearing Yeadon in a radio interview last year.


“There was a tone in his voice that was nothing like I ever remembered of Mike,” Moschos said. “It was very angry, very bitter.”


John LaMattina, a former president of Pfizer Global Research and Development, also knew Yeadon. “His group was very successful and discovered a number of compounds that entered early clinical development,” LaMattina told Reuters in an email. He said Yeadon and his team were let go by Pfizer, however, when the company made the strategic decision to exit the therapeutic area they were researching.


LaMattina said he had lost touch with Yeadon in recent years. Shown links to Yeadon’s video declaring the pandemic over and a copy of his petition to halt COVID-19 clinical trials, LaMattina replied: “This is all news to me and a bit of a shock. This seems out of character for the person I knew.”



A Tweet posted by Michael Yeadon in May 2020. A second deadly wave of COVID-19 hit the UK a few months later. Twitter/Screenshot

“Chutzpah”


After losing his job at Pfizer in 2011, Yeadon set up a biotech company called Ziarco with three Pfizer colleagues. They wanted to continue researching promising therapies that targeted allergies and inflammatory diseases, ideas Pfizer had been developing but were at risk of being abandoned. Yeadon served as Ziarco’s chief executive.


“I simply showed chutzpah and asked the senior-most people up the research line” at Pfizer to support the venture, Yeadon later recalled in an interview with Forbes. “And they said, ‘OK, assuming you raise private capital.’”


In 2012, Ziarco announced it had initially secured funding from several investors, including Pfizer’s venture capital arm. Other investors later joined, including an Amgen Inc corporate venture capital fund. Amgen didn’t respond to a request for comment.


“The intensity of effort took me away almost completely from my family and other interests for almost five years and you get only one life,” Yeadon told Forbes.


On Twitter, Yeadon said he is married and has two adult daughters, and described a tough childhood – he said his mother committed suicide when he was 18 months old and his father, a doctor, abandoned him when he was 16. He said he was saved by a local social worker and adopted by a Jewish family whose “open handed love turned my life around.”


While at Ziarco, Yeadon also worked as a consultant for several years at two Boston-area biotech companies, Apellis Pharmaceuticals and Pulmatrix Inc. Both firms said he no longer advises them. A spokeswoman for Apellis said, “His views do not reflect those of Apellis.” She didn’t elaborate.



After losing his job at Pfizer in 2011, Yeadon set up a biotech company called Ziarco. It was later bought by Swiss drugmaker Novartis. REUTERS/Charles Platiau

The hard work at Ziarco paid off. In January 2017, Novartis acquired the company for an upfront payment of $325 million, with the promise of $95 million more if certain milestones were met, according to Novartis’ 2017 annual report. Novartis was betting on the promise of a Ziarco drug, known as ZPL389, that had the potential to be a “first-in-class oral treatment for moderate-to-severe eczema,” a common and sometimes debilitating rash.


Reuters wasn’t able to determine how much money Yeadon made from Novartis’ purchase of Ziarco. But in January 2020 he tweeted: “Oddly enough, I made millions from founding & growing a biotech company, creating many highly paid jobs, using my PhD & persuasion around the world.”


Last July, Novartis disclosed it had discontinued the ZPL389 clinical development program and had taken a $485 million write down. A Novartis spokesman said the company decided to terminate the program after disappointing efficacy data in an early-stage clinical trial.


“I’ll soon be gone”


Earlier this year, a group of Yeadon’s former Pfizer colleagues expressed their concern in a private letter, according to a draft reviewed by Reuters.


“We have become acutely aware of your views on COVID-19 over the last few months … the single mindedness, lack of scientific rigour and one sided interpretation of often poor quality data is far removed from the Mike Yeadon we so respected and enjoyed working with.”


Noting his “vast following on social media” and that his claim about infertility “has spread globally,” the group wrote, “We are very worried that you are putting people’s health at risk.”


Reuters couldn’t determine whether Yeadon received the letter.


On Feb. 3, Yeadon’s Twitter account had a message for his 91,000 followers: “A tweet recently appeared under my ID, which was horribly offensive. As a result my account was locked. I of course deleted it. I want you to know of course that I didn’t write it.” A Twitter spokesman declined to comment.


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Yeadon didn’t make clear what tweet he was referring to. But shortly after, several Twitter users and a blog called Zelo Street posted screenshots of numerous offensive anti-Muslim tweets from Yeadon’s account from about a year ago. Many were captured at the time by archive.org.


The next day, on Feb. 4, Yeadon cryptically mentioned in a tweet, “I’ll soon be gone.”


Two days later, he was off Twitter. His followers were greeted with this message: “This account doesn’t exist.” His LinkedIn profile also soon changed, now stating that he is “Fully retired.”


Clare Craig, a British pathologist, compared Yeadon’s treatment on Twitter – where some users derided his views as nonsense and dangerous – to medieval societies burning heretics at the stake.


“There is no other way to see it than the burning of the witches,” said Craig, who has criticized lockdowns and COVID-19 tests. “Science is always a series of questions and the testing of those questions and when we are not allowed to ask those questions, then science is lost.”


She said she spoke to Yeadon after he closed his Twitter account. “He will have a think about how he will contribute in the future,” she said.



Graffiti on a shop in Belfast, Northern Ireland. 


The ex-Pfizer scientist who became an anti-vax hero

Retired scientist Michael Yeadon.

Michael Yeadon was a scientific researcher and          vice president at drugs          giant Pfizer Inc. He co-      founded a successful        biotech. Then his career          took an unexpected turn.

Late last year, a semi-retired                British scientist co-authored a              petition to Europe’s medicines          regulator. The petitioners made                    a bold demand: Halt COVID-19              vaccine clinical trials.

Even bolder was their argument                for doing so: They speculated,              without providing evidence, that                the vaccines could cause                  infertility in women.

The document appeared on a            German website on Dec.1.                Scientists denounced the theory. Regulators weren’t swayed,                  either:Weeks later, the European Medicines Agency approved the      European Union’s first COVID-19          shot, co-developed by Pfizer Inc.              But damage was already done.

Social media quickly spread exag-    gerated claims that COVID-19 jabs        cause female infertility. Within            weeks, doctors and nurses in              Britain began reporting that        concerned women were asking              them whether it was true,              according to the Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists.                  In January, a survey by the                    Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF),                  a non-profit organization, found              that 13% of unvaccinated people                in the United States had heard                  that “COVID-19 vaccines have                been shown to cause infertility.”

What gave the debunked claim      credibility was that one of the        petition’s co-authors, Michael            Yeadon, wasn’t just any scientist.            The 60-year-old is a former vice      president of Pfizer, where he                spent 16 years as an allergy and respiratory researcher. He later                  co-founded a biotech firm that                  the Swiss drugmaker Novartis      purchased for at least $325                million.

“These claims are false, dangerous and deeply irresponsible.”

A spokesman for Britain’s Department                                      of Health & Social Care

In recent months, Yeadon          (pronounced Yee-don) has emerg                 -ed as an unlikely hero of the so-        called anti-vaxxers, whose            adherents question the safety of          many vaccines, including for the coronavirus. The anti-vaxxer        movement has amplified Yeadon’s skeptical views about COVID-19        vaccines and tests, government-    mandated lockdowns and the arc                of the pandemic. Yeadon has said              he personally doesn’t oppose the              use of all vaccines. But many                health experts and government          officials worry that opinions like              his fuel vaccine hesitancy – a        reluctance or refusal to be            vaccinated – that could prolong                the pandemic. COVID-19 has                already killed more than 2.6                million people worldwide.

“These claims are false, danger-                ous and deeply irresponsible,”                  said a spokesman for Britain’s Department of Health & Social                Care, when asked about Yeadon’s          views. “COVID-19 vaccines are                  the best way to protect people                from coronavirus and will save    thousands of lives.”

Recent reports of blood clots and abnormal bleeding in a small            number of recipients of            AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine              have cast doubt on that shot’s              safety, leading several European    countries to suspend its use. The developments are likely to fuel          vaccine hesitancy further,                although there is no evidence of                    a causative link between the      AstraZeneca product and the            affected patients’ conditions.

Yeadon didn’t respond to request                 -s for comment for this article.                    In reporting this story, we review                -ed thousands of his tweets over                the past two years, along with                other writings and statements. It            also interviewed five people who          know him, including four of his          former colleagues at Pfizer.

A Pfizer spokesman declined to      comment on Yeadon and his stint          with the company, beyond emphasizing that there is no            evidence that its vaccine, which                  it developed with its German              partner BioNTech, causes                infertility in women.

References to Yeadon’s petition            appear on the website of a group        founded by influential vaccine            skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr.,                scion of the American political          dynasty, who recently was ban-                ned on Instagram because of his        COVID-19 vaccine posts. Syndicat-            ed writer and vaccine skeptic          Michelle Malkin reported Yeadon                ’s concern about fertility in a              column last month under the          headline, “Pregnant Women:              Beware of COVID Shots.” And a                blog with an alarmist headline –            “Head of Pfizer Research: Covid          vaccine is female sterilization” –              was shared thousands of times                  on Facebook.

The visage and views of Yeadon,          widely identified as an “Ex-VP of        Pfizer,’’ can be seen on social                media in languages including            German, Portuguese, Danish and          Czech. A Facebook post carries a            video from November in which          Yeadon claimed that the                  pandemic “fundamentally… is                over.” The post has been viewed            more than a million times.

In October, Yeadon wrote a                column for the United Kingdom’s            Daily Mail newspaper that also      appeared on MailOnline, one of                the world’s most-visited news          websites. It declared that deaths          caused by COVID-19, which then        totaled about 45,000 in Britain,                will soon“fizzle out”and Britons        “should immediately be allowed                  to resume normal life.” Since                    then, the disease has killed about      another 80,000 people in the UK.

Yeadon isn’t the only respected          scientist to have challenged the        scientific consensus on COVID-19            and expressed controversial                  views.

Michael Levitt, a winner of the              Nobel Prize for chemistry, told                    the Stanford Daily last summer                that he expected the pandemic            would end in the United States in            2020 and kill no more than                  175,000 citizens – a third of the            current total – and “when we                come to look back, we’re going to              say that wasn’t such a terrible          disease.” And Luc Montagnier,          another Nobel Prize winner, said            last year that he believed the      coronavirus was created in a            Chinese lab. Many experts doubt            that, but so far there is no way                    to prove or disprove it.

Levitt told us that his projections          about the pandemic in the United        States were wrong, but he still          believes COVID-19 eventually              won’t be seen as “a terrible              disease” and that lockdowns              “caused a great deal of collateral      damage and may not have been      needed.” Montagnier didn’t              respond to a request for                  comment.

What gives Yeadon particular        credibility is the fact that he              worked at Pfizer, says Imran              Ahmed, chief executive of the              Center for Countering Digital                  Hate, an organization that                  combats online misinformation.    “Yeadon’s background gives his    dangerous and harmful                    messages false credibility.”

In a debate last fall in Britain’s              House of Commons about the government’s response to the        pandemic, parliamentarian              Richard Drax called Yeadon an      “eminent” scientist, and cited his          view “that the virus is both        manageable and nearing its end.                  ” Drax didn’t respond to a                    request for comment.

More recently, David Kurten, a          member of the LondonAssembly                  – an elected body – tweeted                    there is a “real danger” that                COVID-19 vaccines could leave            women infertile. “The ‘cure’                    must not be worse than the            ‘disease’,” Kurten wrote. He, too, didn’t respond to a request for        comment.

Why Yeadon transformed from mainstream scientist to COVID-19      vaccine skeptic remains a                  mystery. Thousands of his tweets stretching back to the start of the pandemic document a dramatic              shift in his views – early on, he      supported a vaccine strategy. But            they offer few clues to explain                    his radical turnabout.

Some former colleagues at Pfizer              say they no longer recognize the          Mike Yeadon they once knew.                They described him as a know-      ledgeable and intelligent man                  who always insisted on seeing        evidence and generally avoided      publicity.

One of those ex-colleagues is            Sterghios A. Moschos, who holds        degrees in molecular biology                    and pharmaceutics. In December                  , Yeadon posted on Twitter a                  spoof sign that said, “DITCH THE        MASK.” Moschos tweeted back:              “Mike what hell ?! Are you out to      actively kill people? You do            realize that if you are wrong,                  your suggestions will result in              deaths ??”

“It’ll all fade away”

Yeadon joined Twitter in October            2018 and soon became a prolific              user of the platform. The              thousands of his tweets review-                  ed by us were provided by            archive.org, which stores web              pages, and FollowersAnalysis, a              social media analytics company.

When the coronavirus pandemic      reached the UK in March 2020,          Yeadon initially expressed                  support for developing a vaccine.              He tweeted: “Covid 19 is not                    going away. Until we have a                vaccine or herd immunity” –                natural resistance resulting from          prior exposure to the virus – “all                that can be done is to slow its            spread.”A week later he tweeted:                “A vaccine might be along                  towards the end of 2021, if we’re            really lucky.”

When a fellow Twitter user said      vaccines “harm many, many              people,” Yeadon replied: “Ok,              please refuse it, but do not                  impede its flow to neutrals or                those keen to get it, thanks.”

After Mathai Mammen, the                  global head of research &            development for Janssen, the pharmaceutical division of John-              son & Johnson, posted on                LinkedIn last summer that his          company had started clinical                  trials of a vaccine, Yeadon            responded: “Lovely to see this        milestone, Mathai!” Mammen                didn’t respond to a request for      comment.

But as early as April, Yeadon had          begun voicing unorthodox views.

While Britain was still in its first lockdown last spring, he declared                : “there is nothing especially                virulent or frightening about                covid 19 … it’ll all fade away …                Just a common & garden virus, to          which the world overreacted.”                  And he predicted in a subsequent          tweet that it was “unlikely” the              death toll in the UK would reach        40,000.

By September 2020, Yeadon’s        statements were attracting              attention beyond Twitter. At the            time, a movement had emerged                  in Britain against lockdowns and          other restrictions meant to curb                the disease. He co-authored a              lengthy article on a website call-                ed Lockdown Sceptics. It declared            that the “pandemic as an event in            the UK is essentially complete.”                And, “There is no biological              principle that leads us to expect                    a second wave.” Britain soon            entered a much more deadly              second wave.

On Oct. 16, he wrote another                lengthy article for the same web-              site: “There is absolutely no need              for vaccines to extinguish the        pandemic. I’ve never heard such nonsense talked about vaccines.                You do not vaccinate people who          aren’t at risk from a disease.”

In November, Yeadon appeared                  in a 32-minute video for the anti-lockdown group, Unlocked,                    sitting in a shed with a motor-                  bike behind him. A shorter                    version appeared on Facebook              titled, “The pandemic is over.”

Yeadon called for an end to mass          testing and claimed that 30% of                the population was already          immune to COVID-19 even                    before the pandemic started. By                  the time of the recording, he said                  , there was little scope for the                  virus to spread further in the UK        because most people had already            been infected or were immune.

Those views ran counter to the            findings of the World Health Organization. In December –                    nine months after declaring the        COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic –              the agency said testing suggest-                    ed that less than 10% of the                  world’s population had shown          evidence of infection.

Yeadon’s petition to the European Medicines Agency to halt vaccine        trials followed on Dec. 1. The              agency didn’t respond to                    requests for comment.

“This does not sound like          the guy I knew 20 years          ago.”

Mark Treherne, who worked with Michael                        Yeadon at Pfizer

It’s impossible to measure the              impact of Yeadon’s claim that              COVID-19 vaccines could cause            female infertility. Anecdotally,            though, many women have                  bought into it.

Bonnie Jacobson, a waitress in        Brooklyn, New York, can’t recall          where she first heard about the          fertility issue. But she told us                      that it has made her hesitant to                take a vaccine, as she’d like to                  have children“sooner than later.”

“That’s my main concern,” she                said. “Let more research come                out.” After recently declining to                get vaccinated, she said, the                  tavern where she worked fired                her. NO JAB NO JOB. Jacobson’s        employer didn’t respond to a                request for comment.

A good scientist

According to Yeadon’s LinkedIn            profile, he joined Pfizer in 1995;                the company had a large                operation then in Sandwich in        southern England. He rose to              become a vice president and                    head of allergy and respiratory      research.

Many former colleagues say they              are baffled by his transformation.

Mark Treherne, chairman of            Talisman Therapeutics in              Cambridge, England, said he        overlapped with Yeadon at Pfizer            for about two years and some-              times had coffee with him. “He          always seemed knowledgeable, intelligible, a good scientist. We              were both trained as pharmaco-          logists … so we had something                    in common.”

“I obviously disagree with Mike                  and his recent views,” he said.        Treherne’s company is research-                ing brain inflammation, which                    he said could be triggered by coronaviruses. “This does not                sound like the guy I knew 20                  years ago.”

Moschos, the ex-colleague who                took issue with one of Yeadon’s            tweets, said he considered him a        mentor when they worked                  together at the drugmaker from              2008 to 2011. More recently,              Moschos has been researching          whether it’s possible to test for              COVID-19 with breath samples.                  He said Yeadon’s views are “a                huge disappointment.” He              recounted hearing Yeadon in a              radio interview last year.

“There was a tone in his voice                  that was nothing like I ever        remembered of Mike,” Moschos              said. “It was very angry, very              bitter.”

John LaMattina, a former                  president of Pfizer Global                Research and Development, also          knew Yeadon. “His group was                  very successful and discovered a        number of compounds that              entered early clinical develop-              ment,” LaMattina told us in an              email. He said Yeadon and his                team were let go by Pfizer,                however, when the company                  made the strategic decision to                    exit the therapeutic area they                  were researching.

LaMattina said he had lost touch              with Yeadon in recent years.                  Shown links to Yeadon’s video          declaring the pandemic over and                  a copy of his petition to halt                COVID-19 clinical trials,                    LaMattina replied: “This is all                news to me and a bit of a shock.              This seems out of character for                  the person I knew.”

“Chutzpah”

After losing his job at Pfizer in                2011, Yeadon set up a biotech            company called Ziarco with three Pfizer colleagues. They              wanted to continue researching promising therapies that                      targeted allergies and inflamma-              tory diseases, ideas Pfizer had                  been developing but were at risk                  of being abandoned. Yeadon                served as Ziarco’s chief executive.

“I simply showed chutzpah and            asked the senior-most people up                the research line” at Pfizer to              support the venture, Yeadon                    later recalled in an interview                    with Forbes. “And they said, ‘OK, assuming you raise private                capital.’”

In 2012, Ziarco announced it had        initially secured funding from            several investors, including                Pfizer’s venture capital arm.                  Other investors later joined,              including an Amgen Inc                  corporate venture capital fund.          Amgen didn’t respond to a                    request for comment.

“The intensity of effort took me           away almost completely from                  my family and other interests for        almost five years and you get                  only one life,” Yeadon told Forbes.

On Twitter, Yeadon said he is married and has two adult daughters, and described a tough childhood – he said his mother committed suicide when he was 18 months old and his father, a doctor, abandoned him when he was 16. He said he was saved by a local social worker and adopted by a Jewish family whose “open handed love turned my life around.”

While at Ziarco, Yeadon also worked as a consultant for several years at two Boston-area biotech companies, Apellis Pharmaceuticals and Pulmatrix Inc. Both firms said he no longer advises them. A spokeswoman for Apellis said, “His views do not reflect those of Apellis.” She didn’t elaborate.

The hard work at Ziarco paid off. In January 2017, Novartis acquired the company for an upfront payment of $325 million, with the promise of $95 million more if certain milestones were met, according to Novartis’ 2017 annual report. Novartis was betting on the promise of a Ziarco drug, known as ZPL389, that had the potential to be a “first-in-class oral treatment for moderate-to-severe eczema,” a common and sometimes debilitating rash.

Reuters wasn’t able to determine how much money Yeadon made from Novartis’ purchase of Ziarco. But in January 2020 he tweeted: “Oddly enough, I made millions from founding & growing a biotech company, creating many highly paid jobs, using my PhD & persuasion around the world.”

Last July, Novartis disclosed it had discontinued the ZPL389 clinical development program and had taken a $485 million write down. A Novartis spokesman said the company decided to terminate the program after disappointing efficacy data in an early-stage clinical trial.

“I’ll soon be gone”

Earlier this year, a group of Yeadon’s former Pfizer colleagues expressed their concern in a private letter, according to a draft reviewed by Reuters.

“We have become acutely aware of your views on COVID-19 over the last few months … the single mindedness, lack of scientific rigour and one sided interpretation of often poor quality data is far removed from the Mike Yeadon we so respected and enjoyed working with.”

Noting his “vast following on social media” and that his claim about infertility “has spread globally,” the group wrote, “We are very worried that you are putting people’s health at risk.”

Reuters couldn’t determine whether Yeadon received the letter.

On Feb. 3, Yeadon’s Twitter account had a message for his 91,000 followers: “A tweet recently appeared under my ID, which was horribly offensive. As a result my account was locked. I of course deleted it. I want you to know of course that I didn’t write it.” A Twitter spokesman declined to comment.

Yeadon didn’t make clear what tweet he was referring to. But shortly after, several Twitter users and a blog called Zelo Street posted screenshots of numerous offensive anti-Muslim tweets from Yeadon’s account from about a year ago. Many were captured at the time by archive.org.

The next day, on Feb. 4, Yeadon cryptically mentioned in a tweet, “I’ll soon be gone.”

Two days later, he was off Twitter. His followers were greeted with this message: “This account doesn’t exist.” His LinkedIn profile also soon changed, now stating that he is “Fully retired.”

Clare Craig, a British pathologist, compared Yeadon’s treatment on Twitter – where some users derided his views as nonsense and dangerous – to medieval societies burning heretics at the stake.

“There is no other way to see it than the burning of the witches,” said Craig, who has criticized lockdowns and COVID-19 tests. “Science is always a series of questions and the testing of those questions and when we are not allowed to ask those questions, then science is lost.”

She said she spoke to Yeadon after he closed his Twitter account. “He will have a think about how he will contribute in the future,” she said.

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