Average Weekly Excess Death Doubled after Jabs
Experience among those of Working Age in 32 Nations
COVID isn’t very dangerous for the non-elderly, so if there is an average weekly percent excess death that is high among those of working age, then you’d want to be able to explain it.
One explanation for high weekly percent excess death among those of working age is the COVID jab, itself. If you split a time-window right at the date of the rollout, looking at the several dozen weeks before rollout — and contrasting them against the average excess death for several dozen weeks after rollout — a disturbing picture emerges:
This chart compares the arithmetic average or the mean, but even worse is a comparison of the medians (middle values) of the 32 nations before COVID jabs rolled out versus after:
[click image to enlarge]
Values at right that were over 18% weekly excess death (extremely-high excess) were marked in orange. At bottom right, the purple note calls your attention to the median weekly percent excess death prior to the rollouts (1% weekly excess death) versus the median after the rollouts (7% weekly excess death).
The COVID jabs were apparently able to move the center of the data from a median of just 1% weekly excess death up to 7% weekly excess death. Here is the formal statistical test that “proves” that having the COVID jab available led to more excess death than when no COVID jab was available:
[click image to enlarge]
The time window for all 32 nations began in the week of 1 Mar 2020, and the termination date for all 32 nations ended in the week of 6 Mar 2022 — but the rollout date split that two-year window roughly in half and average weekly excess was found before and after.
The worst nation for working-age death was the USA, with a 65-week average weekly percent excess death of 34% among those of working age. For perspective, the world war with the higher average death rate, World War I, only led to an average of 22% excess death for the 19 months of US engagement.
Reference
[rollout dates for all nations] — CNN. https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2021/health/global-covid-vaccinations/
[excess death by age groups] — OWID. https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/excess-mortality-p-scores-average-baseline-by-age
[World War I casualties: 22% annual excess death, or +3,829 per million excess death, spread out over 19 months of US engagement] — US Census Bureau. https://www.census.gov/history/pdf/reperes112018.pdf