Yeadon falsely claimed in an October 2020
blog post that the
COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom was "effectively over". He stated that there would be no "second wave" of infections and that healthy people could not
spread the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Yeadon has also discouraged
COVID-19 lockdowns and
the use of face masks despite evidence for their effectiveness. Several of Yeadon's false or misleading claims have been amplified on
social media. Yeadon has claimed without evidence that
COVID-19 vaccines were unnecessary, unsafe, and could cause
infertility in women. In a letter to the
European Medicines Agency, Yeadon and the German physician
Wolfgang Wodarg called for all vaccine trials to be stopped, falsely suggesting that mRNA vaccines could target the
syncytin-1 protein needed for placenta formation. A
Telegram account under his name has promoted the unfounded claim that the vaccines cause recipients to
become magnetized. Yeadon has been interviewed by
The Exposé, a website known for publishing COVID-19 misinformation. In an interview with American political strategist
Steve Bannon, Yeadon falsely asserted that children were "50 times more likely to be killed by the COVID vaccines than the virus itself", citing a high number of events following COVID-19 vaccination reported on the
Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) database. The US
Centers for Disease Control, which operates the database, cautions that such reports are not verified and do not prove that vaccines caused any given adverse event. == Political activism ==