While previous vaccine campaigns were often successfully shut-down before more than 100 total deaths accrued, even a liberal estimate on the deaths caused by COVID shots is over a million now — so it is definitely time to “call it quits” with regard to COVID shots.
In a comprehensive review involving 43 under-reporting estimates, Hazell and Shakir discovered that the middle 50% of all under-reporting rates ran from 82% to 98% under-reporting of actual adverse events.
This translates into an adverse event capture rate from 2% up to 18% — which would have a midpoint at 10%. After counting all the death reports in VAERS in the first 6 months of COVID shots, the CDC COVID-19 Response Team found 4,496 death reports by the time that 298.79 million doses had gone out.
That’s 15 death reports per million doses and, extrapolating that reporting rate to the 13.574 billion doses given worldwide by 3 Dec 2023 — adjusted for plausible capture rates — gives the chart above.
Even the most liberal estimate on deaths caused by COVID shots is over 1 million now, so it is a good time to stop them. A good case can no longer be made that they’ve killed “less than” a million people.
Reference
[169.68 doses per 100 people in a world with 8 billion people in it = 13.574 billion doses] — OWID. https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations
[2% to 18% of adverse events make it into passive surveillance systems] — Hazell L, Shakir SA. Under-reporting of adverse drug reactions : a systematic review. Drug Saf. 2006;29(5):385-96. doi: 10.2165/00002018-200629050-00003. PMID: 16689555. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16689555/
[15 death reports per million doses] — Rosenblum HG, Gee J, Liu R, Marquez PL, Zhang B, Strid P, Abara WE, McNeil MM, Myers TR, Hause AM, Su JR, Markowitz LE, Shimabukuro TT, Shay DK. Safety of mRNA vaccines administered during the initial 6 months of the US COVID-19 vaccination programme: an observational study of reports to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System and v-safe. Lancet Infect Dis. 2022 Jun;22(6):802-812. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(22)00054-8. Epub 2022 Mar 7. PMID: 35271805; PMCID: PMC8901181. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8901181/