Dr. Kimberly Biss is an OB-GYN doctor, and it was reported by Vigilant News that she saw 13 miscarriages out of 41 pregnancies which presented to her clinic in December of 2022.
Prior research revealed that up to 10% of clinically-recognized pregnancies miscarry, and that only 80% do so during the first trimester (only 8% miscarry in the first trimester), but a recent empirical investigation by Naert et al. gave evidence which was only consistent (at 99% confidence) with true baseline rates from 4.3% to 6.7%:
[click to enlarge]
In cell E6, you can see the 99% upper bound of baseline first-trimester miscarriage rates is 6.7% — though the citation in cell B1 had put the baseline first-trimester miscarriage rate at 8%.
The December 2022 rate was so high that even the 99% lower bound on it didn’t even come close to 6.7% — or even 8% for that matter — indicating high statistical significance of “something” interfering with human pregnancies.
When the probability of the December 2022 evidence was determined using the Poisson Distribution (a distribution that is statistically appropriate for this evidence), then it turns out that the December 2022 miscarriage rate was so extreme that it is not seen by chance any more than one time in every 23,000 months (once every 2,000 years).
Because there are only about 5,000 years of recorded history, then that means that — with all else equal — then you would expect to have a monthly ratio of “13 or more miscarriages” for every 41 consecutive pregnancies, up to 3 times in all of recorded human history:
once 4,000 years ago
once more 2,000 years ago
one more time, in Dr. Biss’ clinic (in December of 2022)
Reference
[baseline first-trimester miscarriage rate is, at most, 8%] — StatPearls. Miscarriage. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK532992/
[empirically-derived upper bound on first-trimester miscarriage rate is 6.7%] — Naert MN, Khadraoui H, Muniz Rodriguez A, Fox NS. Stratified risk of pregnancy loss for women with a viable singleton pregnancy in the first trimester. J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med. 2022 Dec;35(23):4491-4495. doi: 10.1080/14767058.2020.1852212. Epub 2020 Nov 22. PMID: 33225797. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33225797/
[Dr. Biss saw a miscarriage rate for December 2022 of 13/41 = 31.7% — 4 times what it should have been] — Vigilant News. https://vigilantnews.com/post/ob-gyn-drops-alarming-miscarriage-data-before-congress-ive-never-seen-this-before
Thank you for the analysis. This one month from one practitioner demands a thorough government investigation. I suppose if there are 23,000 practitioners then someone could argue that you would expect one of them to have these numbers once a month, but what if 20 or 30 practitioners have numbers like these. Oh, then they bland covid-19 and refuse to allow anyone to ask about the vaccination status, because these women are grieving.