The Issue of Excess Deaths By Richard Miller (London)

The UK health authorities are puzzled by the undeniable statistics of excess deaths that have emerged since the vaccine roll-outs. As detailed from the mainstream material below, a variety of explanations have been offered, including the cost of living, weaknesses in the immune system due to Covid, and even long Covid, something the vax in any case should have prevented. Anything is said other than to consider that the vaccines, which have a phone-book length of adverse effects, could be at fault. We can see where this will go, as deaths and adverse events pile up, the Covid regime will double-up even harder, with their buddies in the media, slaves of big pHARMa, covering things up, or not reporting at all.

https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/the-safe-and-effective-narrative?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

 

https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/uk-news/957270/non-covid-excess-deaths-why-are-they-on-the-rise?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

 

“A rise in the number of people dying each week in England and Wales is not being driven by Covid, newly published data shows.

Latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that excess deaths – the total number of deaths above the average count for a given period – reached 1,540 in the week ending 24 June. A total of 10,836 deaths were registered in England and Wales, a 16.6% increase on the five-year average.

But only 2.6% (285) of the latest deaths involved Covid-19 – a finding that has triggered calls for “an urgent investigation into what is behind the excess mortality”, reported The Telegraph’s health editor Sarah Knapton.

‘Alarming trend’

Prior to the end of March, death tallies were lower than usual “despite hundreds of people dying from Covid”, wrote Knapton. But “the situation has reversed” over the past three months, “with overall deaths rising even though Covid deaths have been falling”.

“One alarming trend that emerged in 2020 is very much still with us: people dying at home,” said The Spectator’s data journalist Michael Simmons. The latest weekly figures show that the number of at-home deaths was 31.5% above the five-year average, compared with 12.1% above average in hospitals and 10.3% in care homes.

Overall, “some 13,000 people more than average” have died at home so far this year in England and Wales, reported Simmons. “In hospitals though it’s 7,200 below average and there have been 3,649 fewer in care homes too.”

Dementia and Alzheimer’s remain the leading cause of death in England, while ischaemic heart diseases are the leading causes in Wales. 

But experts are pointing towards other factors, including the cost-of-living crisis and lack of healthcare access, as reasons why the mortality rate is increasing even as Covid deaths fall.

Paul Hunter, professor in medicine at the University of East Anglia, told The Telegraph that some of the excess deaths could be down to Covid further weakening already vulnerable peoples’ health. But other, “quite complex” factors were at play, he said.

Hunter suggested that the “current financial situation” could be “exacerbating” the problem of reduced access to healthcare and delays to treatment, as well as causing “chronic stress”. And “reduced activity and sedentary” lifestyles as a result of lockdown restrictions might also have played a part. 

Harley Street GP Charles Levinson told The Spectator that while “every slight bump or uptick in the Covid numbers demands endless column inches”, there had been “total silence from so many” on the “damning” overall death statistics.

Over the course of the pandemic, “thousands of people were unable or unwilling to seek medical advice”, he said, adding that “we are not anywhere near to discovering the full extent of this crisis”.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/07/05/excess-deaths-rise-not-covid/?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

 

 

https://www.survivethenews.com/england-excess-deaths-on-the-rise-but-not-because-of-covid-experts-call-for-investigation/?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

 

 

 

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Sunday, 12 May 2024

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