In this prior Substack, I claimed, without proving it, that ICU admissions in Israel tracked in lock-step with COVID jab administration rates. This addendum explores the hypothetical case of a mechanistic injection-infection-hospitalization phenomenon (where COVID jabs are seen as putting you into the ICU).
What Signature would identify a “vaccine-induced” COVID hospitalization?
It wouldn’t be immediate. The shortest time from COVID jab to hospitalization would be 5 days, and the longest time would be 25 days.
It takes 2 to 14 days of ‘symptom-less’ incubation before COVID gives you symptoms, and it takes another 3 to 9 days from symptom onset to hospitalization.
It could take another day or two to transfer you into ICU, giving an upper limit of 25 days post-injection.
Does Israel show that Signature?
Here are the COVID jab administration rates (orange dots) superimposed on top of the ICU admission rates (blue dots) for Israel:
The clearest indication of “vaccine-induced” COVID hospitalization is at far right, where the ICU admissions mirror the COVID jab administrations but with a 22-day time lag (which fits into the requirements given above).
Twenty-two days after COVID jab rates peaked out, ICU admissions peaked out — just as if those ICU admissions had been caused by the COVID jabs taken 3 weeks prior.
So the answer is “yes” — data from Israel are the kind of data that you would see if COVID jabs were putting people into the hospital with severe COVID. It would look like it has looked.
Additional evidence is the September peak. If only seasonality was in play, that peak wouldn’t be there, and the only two peaks in the graph would be the two winters.
But because a drive existed in Israel to increase COVID injections a week or two prior, then the increased ICU admissions in September— with a one-week to two-week lag this time — are mechanistically explained by the prior COVID shots.
Notice how there is a brief bump-up in jab rates prior to 17 Aug 2021 and also prior to January 2022, as if to ‘prime-the-pump’ and initiate a sustained increase in ICU administration rates via continued COVID injections later.
Reference
[5-25 days before ICU admission] — Linton NM, Kobayashi T, Yang Y, Hayashi K, Akhmetzhanov AR, Jung SM, Yuan B, Kinoshita R, Nishiura H. Incubation Period and Other Epidemiological Characteristics of 2019 Novel Coronavirus Infections with Right Truncation: A Statistical Analysis of Publicly Available Case Data. J Clin Med. 2020 Feb 17;9(2):538. doi: 10.3390/jcm9020538. PMID: 32079150; PMCID: PMC7074197. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7074197/