A new study found COVID-19 vaccines were "useless" in reducing all-cause mortality in the United States."The mass vaccination campaign was not justified in terms of reducing excess all-cause mortality. The large excess mortality of the COVID period, far above the historic trend, was maintained throughout the entire COVID period irrespective of the unprecedented vaccination campaign and is very strongly correlated to poverty," the study's authors said.The study, titled COVID-Period Mass Vaccination Campaign and Public Health Disaster in the USA From age/state-resolved all-cause mortality by time, age-resolved vaccine delivery by time, and socio-geo-economic data, was authored by the Ontario Civil Liberties Association's Denis Rancourt, along with Marine Baudin and Jérémie Mercier.To come up with the results, the study compared all-cause mortality in the US by time, age group, and by state. It then compared that to the number of vaccinated individuals by time, injection sequences, age group, and state, in order to detect temporal associations that would "imply beneficial or deleterious effects from the vaccination campaign."According to the study, the mass vaccination campaign in the USA was "useless" in terms of all-cause mortality. It said during the COVID period, excess mortality in the country sat at 1.27 million deaths. But this was linked to socio-economic factors such as poverty, median household income, obesity, disability or support programs for disability."The age distribution of the excess mortality is incompatible with mortality from a viral respiratory disease and, according to the most probable hypothesis, is the result of institutional, political and medical measures applied following the declaration of a pandemic by the WHO on March 11, 2020," the study said.The authors claimed the economic and societal consequences of public health restrictions triggered "persistent chronic psychological stress and unprecedented social isolation" that decimated the immune systems of poor, obese, and disabled Americans. This caused them to succumb to bacterial pneumonia, "at a time when a large bacterial pneumonia epidemic raged and antibiotic prescriptions dropped in the USA."Rancourt said additionally, hastily implemented COVID-19 vaccine equity programs could have resulted in an increase in all-cause mortality."All of our observations can be coherently understood if we interpret that the COVID-period socio-economic, regulatory and institutional conditions induced chronic stress and social isolation among members of large vulnerable groups, which in turn caused many of these individuals to be more and fatally immunocompromised," Rancourt said.
A new study found COVID-19 vaccines were "useless" in reducing all-cause mortality in the United States."The mass vaccination campaign was not justified in terms of reducing excess all-cause mortality. The large excess mortality of the COVID period, far above the historic trend, was maintained throughout the entire COVID period irrespective of the unprecedented vaccination campaign and is very strongly correlated to poverty," the study's authors said.The study, titled COVID-Period Mass Vaccination Campaign and Public Health Disaster in the USA From age/state-resolved all-cause mortality by time, age-resolved vaccine delivery by time, and socio-geo-economic data, was authored by the Ontario Civil Liberties Association's Denis Rancourt, along with Marine Baudin and Jérémie Mercier.To come up with the results, the study compared all-cause mortality in the US by time, age group, and by state. It then compared that to the number of vaccinated individuals by time, injection sequences, age group, and state, in order to detect temporal associations that would "imply beneficial or deleterious effects from the vaccination campaign."According to the study, the mass vaccination campaign in the USA was "useless" in terms of all-cause mortality. It said during the COVID period, excess mortality in the country sat at 1.27 million deaths. But this was linked to socio-economic factors such as poverty, median household income, obesity, disability or support programs for disability."The age distribution of the excess mortality is incompatible with mortality from a viral respiratory disease and, according to the most probable hypothesis, is the result of institutional, political and medical measures applied following the declaration of a pandemic by the WHO on March 11, 2020," the study said.The authors claimed the economic and societal consequences of public health restrictions triggered "persistent chronic psychological stress and unprecedented social isolation" that decimated the immune systems of poor, obese, and disabled Americans. This caused them to succumb to bacterial pneumonia, "at a time when a large bacterial pneumonia epidemic raged and antibiotic prescriptions dropped in the USA."Rancourt said additionally, hastily implemented COVID-19 vaccine equity programs could have resulted in an increase in all-cause mortality."All of our observations can be coherently understood if we interpret that the COVID-period socio-economic, regulatory and institutional conditions induced chronic stress and social isolation among members of large vulnerable groups, which in turn caused many of these individuals to be more and fatally immunocompromised," Rancourt said.