Report: VACCINES and LOCKDOWNS are responsible for excess all-cause mortality, not COVID-19 infection

Vaccines and lockdowns to address the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) are to blame for the excess all-cause mortality during the pandemic, according to a new report.

The said report was published by not-for-profit corporation Correlation Canada and was authored by the group's associate researchers Denis Rancourt, Joseph Hickey and Christian Linard. It examined all-cause mortality data in 125 nations between the years 2020 and 2023.

The three researchers found that deaths commonly attributed to COVID-19 were actually due to other factors – including lockdowns and, in bitter irony, the injections touted as a solution for the pathogen. According to them, this excess all-cause mortality worldwide is incompatible with a viral respiratory disease as a primary cause of death.

"We describe plausible mechanisms and argue that the three primary causes of death associated with the excess all-cause mortality during (and after) the COVID-19 period are: biological (including psychological) stress from mandates, such as lockdowns and associated socio-economic structural changes; non-COVID-19-vaccine medical interventions, such as mechanical ventilators and drugs; and COVID-19 vaccine injection rollouts, including repeated rollouts on the same populations," they wrote.

Writing for Armageddon Prose, Ben Bartee commented on the second cause of death. He pointed out that "based on reports from countless nurses and other frontline healthcare providers," the scheme involved putting COVID-19 patients on ventilators knowing fully aware that they won't make it. Another scheme, Bartee noted, was the administration of the dangerous drug midazolam on COVID-19 patients and listing the cause of death as COVID-19 infection.

Hospitals incentivized to hook COVID-19 patients to ventilators

"Let's not be naive enough to delude ourselves into believing it was a coincidence that the hospitals were given a financial incentive to throw maximum numbers of grannies on ventilators," Bartee continued. According to the Thailand-based commentator, hospitals' payout from Medicare tripled when they did so. This was on top of the special 20 percent bonus for COVID-19 patients courtesy of the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act.

According to WRAL News, the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) estimated that the average Medicare payment for a less severe hospitalizations is at $13,297. A hospitalization where a patient is hooked to a ventilator for at least 96 hours is at $40,218.

KFF's estimate is roughly the same as numbers given by former Minnesota State Sen. Scott Jensen, a Republican, during an interview with Laura Ingraham of Fox News. According to him, a hospital gets paid $13,000 if a COVID-19 patient on Medicare is admitted and $39,000 if the patient goes on a ventilator. Jensen, a physician by profession, remarked that doctors are being encouraged to cite COVID-19 as a cause of death on death certificates – suggesting money as a motivation.

"A COVID-19 patient on a ventilator will need more services and more complicated services, not just the ventilator," said Joseph Antos, scholar in health care at the American Enterprise Institute. "It is reasonable that a patient who is on a ventilator would cost three times one who isn’t that sick."

Medicare will pay hospitals a 20 percent "add-on" to the regular DRG payment for (COVID-19) patients. That’s a result of the CARES Act, the largest of the three federal stimulus laws enacted in response to the coronavirus, which was signed into law March 27.

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Report: VACCINES and LOCKDOWNS are responsible for excess all-cause mortality, not COVID-19 infection Vaccines and lockdowns to address the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) are to blame for the excess all-cause mortality during the pandemic, according to a new report. The said report was published by not-for-profit corporation Correlation Canada and was authored by the group's associate researchers Denis Rancourt, Joseph Hickey and Christian Linard. It examined all-cause mortality data in 125 nations between the years 2020 and 2023. The three researchers found that deaths commonly attributed to COVID-19 were actually due to other factors – including lockdowns and, in bitter irony, the injections touted as a solution for the pathogen. According to them, this excess all-cause mortality worldwide is incompatible with a viral respiratory disease as a primary cause of death. "We describe plausible mechanisms and argue that the three primary causes of death associated with the excess all-cause mortality during (and after) the COVID-19 period are: biological (including psychological) stress from mandates, such as lockdowns and associated socio-economic structural changes; non-COVID-19-vaccine medical interventions, such as mechanical ventilators and drugs; and COVID-19 vaccine injection rollouts, including repeated rollouts on the same populations," they wrote. Writing for Armageddon Prose, Ben Bartee commented on the second cause of death. He pointed out that "based on reports from countless nurses and other frontline healthcare providers," the scheme involved putting COVID-19 patients on ventilators knowing fully aware that they won't make it. Another scheme, Bartee noted, was the administration of the dangerous drug midazolam on COVID-19 patients and listing the cause of death as COVID-19 infection. Hospitals incentivized to hook COVID-19 patients to ventilators "Let's not be naive enough to delude ourselves into believing it was a coincidence that the hospitals were given a financial incentive to throw maximum numbers of grannies on ventilators," Bartee continued. According to the Thailand-based commentator, hospitals' payout from Medicare tripled when they did so. This was on top of the special 20 percent bonus for COVID-19 patients courtesy of the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act. According to WRAL News, the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) estimated that the average Medicare payment for a less severe hospitalizations is at $13,297. A hospitalization where a patient is hooked to a ventilator for at least 96 hours is at $40,218. KFF's estimate is roughly the same as numbers given by former Minnesota State Sen. Scott Jensen, a Republican, during an interview with Laura Ingraham of Fox News. According to him, a hospital gets paid $13,000 if a COVID-19 patient on Medicare is admitted and $39,000 if the patient goes on a ventilator. Jensen, a physician by profession, remarked that doctors are being encouraged to cite COVID-19 as a cause of death on death certificates – suggesting money as a motivation. "A COVID-19 patient on a ventilator will need more services and more complicated services, not just the ventilator," said Joseph Antos, scholar in health care at the American Enterprise Institute. "It is reasonable that a patient who is on a ventilator would cost three times one who isn’t that sick." Medicare will pay hospitals a 20 percent "add-on" to the regular DRG payment for (COVID-19) patients. That’s a result of the CARES Act, the largest of the three federal stimulus laws enacted in response to the coronavirus, which was signed into law March 27. Join on Telegram channel 👇 https://t.me/DrJudyMikovitsHealthSecrets
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Dr. Judy Mikovits
Mother, Research Scientist Fear is the virus, truth is the care! Learn to Heal Yourse.🌱 TheRealDrJudy.com
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