New study suggests COVID narrative on all cause mortality may not add up.

New study suggests COVID narrative on all cause mortality may not add up.

BY JEFF SKINNER

STATEWIDE - A new study from Dr. Denis G. Rancourt suggests that the all cause mortality rates between western nations were not the result of the Covid-19 virus, as modern narratives have pushed, but rather the pandemic response measures themselves. 

According to the preprint study, researchers used high-resolution geotemporal all-cause mortality data to show that mortality patterns from March-May 2020 in Europe and the USA were incompatible with the leading narrative of having been caused by person-to-person spread of a novel infectious virus. Instead, researchers argue the main outlying factor was the Covid-related responses by hospitals, governments and others. 

“We also examined data concerning the location of death (whether in hospital, at home, in a nursing home, etc.) and socioeconomic vulnerability (poverty, minority status, crowded living conditions, etc.) at high geographic resolutions, which support an alternative hypothesis that excess mortality in jurisdictions with large F-peaks was caused by the application of dangerous medical treatments (in particular, invasive mechanical ventilation and pharmaceutical treatments) and pneumonia induced by biological stress due to treatment and lockdown measures,” the study said. “Exceptionally large F-peaks occurred in areas with large publicly-funded hospitals serving poor or socioeconomically frail communities, in regions where poor neighborhoods are situated in proximity to wealthy neighborhoods, such as the case of The Bronx in New York City, and the boroughs of Brent and Westminster in London, UK.” 
The study suggested distribution of mortalities did not line up with what would typically be found in a respiratory virus.

Based on the study conducted, peaks of mortality did not follow standard trajectories of what would be expected in a respiratory illness, but instead linked up better with hospitals and medical centers where strict and dangerous medical interventions were being utilized, such as ventilation, which was known to cause damage to the lung tissue, and prescription of pharmaceutical interventions such as remdesivir, which was known to cause organ failure. 

The study is still currently in preprint status, but presents a stark contrast to the official narrative. The preprint can be downloaded below.

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