Stories of Covid vaccination side effects or worse

Canada’s 2022 excess deaths on pace to shatter 2021 and 2020

Canada’s 2022 excess deaths on pace to shatter 2021 and 2020

Excess deaths is the term that indicates whether a region had more or fewer deaths than expected, given demographics and historical trends. The figure helps calculate the true impact of a health crisis.

Imagine a pandemic so deadly, the highest rates of excess death came after the vaccine rollout.
— Canadian Refusenik (@cdnrefusenik) January 26, 2023

Canada’s reporting lags behind most other first-world countries. The current total for excess deaths in 2022 is only recorded up to week 35.

Health Canada data indicates 13,940 excess deaths took place in 2022 up to this point – August 27.

At week 35 in 2021, the total excess deaths was 10,406. In 2020, the total was 8,057.

In other words, the 2022 excess death total, with an 85% vaccinated population, is on pace to far surpass the total from 2020 when no one was vaccinated in Canada.

Understanding the true impact of the pandemic between 2020 and 2022 was impossible without the excess death numbers.

Of course, the Covid virus evolved. As a result, different variants had more or less severity.

In 2020, the dominant variant was Alpha, while by the middle of 2021 the Delta variant became prevalent in Canada.

These “excess deaths” are grandmothers, grandfathers, mothers, fathers, daughters, sons, sisters, brothers, aunts, uncles, nieces, and nephews. Their lives matter. The silence is deafening.
— Wittgenstein (@backtolife_2023) January 27, 2023

Legacy media created hysteria around the Delta variant in 2021, as the just-vaccinated population was learning they were not immune from getting infected with Covid.

Data suggested that the Delta variant was more contagious than Alpha, but less deadly. Furthermore, research indicates the Omicron variant – which became dominant in 2022 – is even less lethal than the Delta.

The cause of excess deaths could be several factors, including missed cancer screenings, suicides, mental health deterioration from the lockdowns and pandemic, and countless other possibilities.

Health Canada says death by the Covid vaccine is not one of those factors. Health Canada acknowledges 400 reports of death by covid vaccination, but it has confirmed the legitimacy of none of those claims.

U.K. – EXCESS DEATHS – Absolutely nothing to question here.

Excess deaths in the first 2 weeks of Jan are now at 36% above 5 year average.

Silence from the Government, the CMO, and the experts at SAGE.

They know that we know! pic.twitter.com/S9dOpq0R9a
— Bernie's Tweets (@BernieSpofforth) January 24, 2023

 
Anastasia M. Weaver, 6, passed away unexpectedly, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2023, in the emergency room at Akron Children’s Hospital in Boardma

Anastasia Marie Weaver

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Lisa Loring, the Original Wednesday Addams, Dies at 64 After 'Massive Stroke'

Lisa Loring




UK: Clare Drakeford: Wife of Wales' FM Mark Drakeford dies suddenly at 68

Clare Drakeford

Mr Drakeford said they were in the top four vaccination priority groups "due to their conditions".
In October 2020 he spoke of the "difficult days" of that year when his wife and mother fell ill with coronavirus.




Footballer who went to hospital with flu symptoms has legs amputated days before 21st birthday

Levi Dewey

Levi Dewey, now 21, suffered multiple organ failure after catching a form of the flu and subsequently suffered severe sepsis and at one point was described as the sickest person in the country.



Former UA swimming standout Ty Wells, 23, dies suddenly

Ty Wells.jpg

Former swimming standout Ty Wells, 23, died Friday, Arizona Athletics announced. The cause of his death has not been disclosed.


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Anastasia M. Weaver, 6, passed away unexpectedly, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2023, in the emergency room at Akron Children’s Hospital in Boardma

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Bei Facebook anmelden


🙏



Lisa Loring, the Original Wednesday Addams, Dies at 64 After 'Massive Stroke'

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UK: Clare Drakeford: Wife of Wales' FM Mark Drakeford dies suddenly at 68

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Footballer who went to hospital with flu symptoms has legs amputated days before 21st birthday

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Former UA swimming standout Ty Wells, 23, dies suddenly

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A genocide, a genocide, a genocide.
 
yes and also this !

I think that this sort of military operation happened in every country. I remember militaries on the street during in 2020 after the coup d'état, sometimes at some corners of the streets, just being there, actors in this farce. A lot of military jeeps on the streets, also, going there and there. And I am not sure of that, but I think that also some General talking on tv supporting the government in the COVID-19 situation, if not a General, my memory falls, but yes the number one of the Security Forces of the State, talking and saying the same discourse, we support the State, bla bla bla.

All of this created a war ambiance, helped tho the scare issue made by the mass media on tv. It was really a perfect script, almost a movie script, and it worked to start the genocide.
 
"After every COVID-19 vaccine dose my eczema got worse, after the 3rd dose, I went to a dermatologist..."

But she didn't stop taking the doses, because we are all in this together.

But you see, this is a win... For Pharma has a new customer for an anti cancer drug... at overly inflated prices. Your loss, is their gain.💸 Sad to say it, but this is reality...
💰💲
 
New disease discovered just 2 years ago. Hmmm. What else happened just 2 years ago? Article that follows raises some questions. Like how do they know survival time is about 10 years if it was only discovered 2 years ago? It is 'genetic'. Anyway, interesting.

The deadly VEXAS syndrome is more common than doctors thought​

The inflammatory illness may affect nearly 1 in 4,000 older men in the United States​

An elderly male patient sits on a medical exam bed with his back to the camera and a medical professional holding a stethoscope to the patient's back.


Older men are more likely than women to get VEXAS syndrome, a genetic disease that arises later in life.

By Meghan Rosen
JANUARY 31, 2023 AT 7:00 AM
A mysterious new disease may be to blame for severe, unexplained inflammation in older men. Now, researchers have their first good look at who the disease strikes, and how often.
VEXAS syndrome, an illness discovered just two years ago, affects nearly 1 in 4,000 men over 50 years old, scientists estimate January 24 in JAMA. The disease also occurs in older women, though less frequently. Altogether, more than 15,000 people in the United States may be suffering from the syndrome, says study coauthor David Beck, a clinical geneticist at NYU Langone Health in New York City. Those numbers indicate that physicians should be on the lookout for VEXAS, Beck says. “It’s underrecognized and underdiagnosed. A lot of physicians aren’t yet aware of it.

Beck’s team reported discovering VEXAS syndrome in 2020, linking mutations in a gene called UBA1 to a suite of symptoms including fever, low blood cell count and inflammation. His team’s new study is the first to estimate how often VEXAS occurs in the general population — and the results are surprising. “It’s more prevalent than we suspected,” says Emma Groarke, a hematologist at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., who was not involved with the study.

What are the symptoms of VEXAS syndrome?​

People with the disease may experience an assortment of symptoms across the body, including:
  • Painful skin rashes
  • Swelling and pain of the ears, nose and joints
  • Cough and shortness of breath
  • Blood vessel inflammation
  • Fever
  • Extreme fatigue
  • Anemia
  • Low blood cell count
  • Blood clots
SOURCE: NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ARTHRITIS AND MUSCULOSKELETAL AND SKIN DISEASES
VEXAS tends to show up later in life — after people somehow acquire UBA1 mutations in their blood cells. Patients may feel overwhelming fatigue, lethargy and have skin rashes, Beck says. “The disease is progressive, and it’s severe.” VEXAS can also be deadly. Once a person’s symptoms begin, the median survival time is about 10 years, his team has found.
Until late 2020, no one knew that there was a genetic thread connecting VEXAS syndrome’s otherwise unexplained symptoms. In fact, individuals may be diagnosed with other conditions, including polyarteritis nodosa, an inflammatory blood disease, and relapsing polychondritis, a connective tissue disorder, before being diagnosed with VEXAS.
To ballpark the number of VEXAS-affected individuals, Beck’s team combed through electronic health records of more than 160,000 people in Pennsylvania, in a collaboration with the NIH and Geisinger Health. In people over 50, the disease-causing UBA1 mutations showed up in roughly 1 in 4,000 men. Among women in that age bracket, about 1 in 26,000 had the mutations.
A genetic test of the blood can help doctors diagnose VEXAS, and treatments like steroids and other immunosuppressive drugs, which tamp down inflammation, can ease symptoms. Groarke and her NIH colleagues have also started a small phase II clinical trial testing bone marrow transplants as a way to swap patients’ diseased blood cells for healthy ones.
Beck says he hopes to raise awareness about the disease, though he recognizes that there’s much more work to do. In his team’s study, for instance, the vast majority of participants were white Pennsylvanians, so scientists don’t know how the disease affects other populations. Researchers also don’t know what spurs the blood cell mutations, nor how they spark an inflammatory frenzy in the body.
“The more patients that are diagnosed, the more we’ll learn about the disease,” Beck says. “This is just one step in the process of finding more effective therapies.”
Questions or comments on this article? E-mail us at feedback@sciencenews.org
 
New disease discovered just 2 years ago.
I don't know if VEXAS is legit, but if they can invent diseases to sell new products, certainly they can do the same to cover the side effects of old products.



And this one is disturbing. Apparently they are using AI to try to create new drugs, but in the same process, can find killer chemicals.
 
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