One of the greatest inventions of humankind is Pubmed, the public portal to the largest online database for medical research. If you search for keywords in the title of reports published in medical journals, you can watch the number evolve over time.
This post regards the words “myocarditis” and “myopericarditis” and “pericarditis.” For the 209 years since 1814, there have been 19,470 reports published in medical journals with one of those three words in the title:
But notice the annual frequency distribution at left. It is clear that something is going on with “myopericarditis”-type terms recently. The publishing frequency is off of the charts, indicating that there is something causing an awful lot of attention toward this dangerous malady.
Here is the publishing-frequency trend for the years from 2000-2019:
The regression equation at top right indicates that, for each year that passes, it is expected for there to be 21 more myocarditis reports than the prior year. The high r-squared value confirms that the trend is, indeed, a linear one.
Here is an extension of data so as to include the “COVID years”
The abrupt increase in publishing frequency indicates a safety signal. To statistically verify it, I ran a 99% prediction interval with a lower bound in orange and an upper bound in gray (while the COVID years turned yellow):
According to trend, there wasn’t even one-half of a 1% chance to see values above the gray dots, indicating that the spike in frequency is statistically significant. While the 2020 year reached statistical significance, it was nothing like the years of 2021 and 2022.
Publishing-frequency evidence suggests that there is something in the environment which is causing a lot of people to develop myo- and peri-carditis. A prime suspect for this statistically-confirmed safety signal is the COVID jabs.
Reference
[search page to view the data for yourself (see search code below)] — Pubmed. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Search code to paste into the search bar:
myocarditis[Title] OR myopericarditis[Title] OR pericarditis[Title]
Interesting analysis! We are seeing a similar trend in "cancer" papers on pubmed.
For example in 2020 there were 71,544 "cancer" papers. By 2022 that number had jumped to 277,075 papers that year, down from 284,299 in 2021. That appears to be a more accurate indication of what is really happening than relying on US health statistics...
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=Cancer&filter=years.2000-2024&timeline=expanded
Well done