Controversial Report: COVID-19 Vaccines May Not Prevent Deaths, Linked to Increased Mortality
A controversial new report challenges the established narrative on COVID-19 vaccines, suggesting they may not have prevented deaths and could even be linked to increased mortality rates, particularly among the elderly.
The study, details of which are yet to be officially released, analysed data from 17 Southern Hemisphere countries. It found that all-cause mortality increased significantly during the vaccination period starting in January 2021. This resulted in an excess of 1.74 million deaths, equating to one death per 800 injections.
The report calculates a mean all-ages fatal toxicity by injection of one death per 800 injections, leading to an estimated 17 million COVID-19 vaccine-related deaths worldwide from 13.25 billion injections by Sept. 2, 2023. This figure is 1,000 times higher than previously reported.
Unprecedented peaks in all-cause mortality were observed in January and February 2022, coinciding with or following the rollout of boosters in 15 of the 17 countries studied. Notably, nine of these countries had no detectable excess deaths before the vaccination campaign began.
The report concludes that COVID-19 vaccines did not have any beneficial effect on reducing mortality in the 17 countries studied. Instead, it found that boosters, particularly third and fourth doses, were associated with unprecedented peaks in high all-cause mortality, especially among the elderly. Further investigation is needed to verify these findings and understand their implications.
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