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WHO Report Challenges COVID-19 Vaccination Narrative, Links to Excess Deaths

A new WHO report challenges the narrative on COVID-19 vaccinations, linking them to excess deaths and suggesting they may not have saved lives. The study raises serious questions about current vaccination strategies.

In this image we can see few people standing and a person is holding a vaccine bottle and there is...
In this image we can see few people standing and a person is holding a vaccine bottle and there is a calendar and text on the image.

A new report by the WHO's European Respiratory Surveillance Network challenges the narrative on COVID-19 vaccinations. It suggests that prioritizing the elderly for vaccination may be harmful, with the risk of death per injection increasing exponentially with age.

The study, published in September 2023, estimates that the United States experienced around 160,000 excess deaths during a period when over 60 million vaccine doses were administered. This is concerning, as the vaccine-dose fatality rate (vDFR) increased exponentially with age, reaching nearly 5% among those 90 years and older who received a fourth dose.

The report also found that excess all-cause mortality during the vaccination period was one death per 800 injections across 17 countries. In Chile and Peru, the vDFR was most significant for the most recent booster doses, resulting in one death per 20 injections in those over age 90.

Contrary to previous claims, the study found no evidence of a beneficial effect from COVID-19 vaccine rollouts on all-cause mortality. Instead, unprecedented peaks in all-cause mortality were observed in Southern Hemisphere countries during the summer season, coinciding with the rollout of booster doses. All-cause mortality increased in 17 countries after COVID-19 vaccines were deployed, with 15 countries experiencing an unprecedented surge in all-age all-cause mortality coinciding with or immediately preceded by a rapid rollout of booster doses.

The report suggests that COVID-19 vaccines may not have saved lives but instead resulted in a significant global death toll, estimated at 17 million worldwide. These findings raise serious questions about the current vaccination strategies and the need for further investigation.

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