Spreadsheet Notes for the recent "High Jabs/High Death" Substack
Added notes to make the case even stronger
In a previous Substack, I showed how having comparatively-high jab rates led to faster accumulation of excess death per million— using Denmark as a standard. Here are notes (explained below) that go deeper into the numbers:
[click image to enlarge]
At left are the daily jab rates where a value of 0.01, for example, would mean that 1% of the population is getting jabbed per day. Color codes indicate if you are engaging in high jab rates (orange), moderately high jab rates (yellow), or very low jab rates (green).
By summer of 2022, jab rates in Denmark were very low.
Just to the right of the jab rates are the accumulated excess death values per million population. Negative accumulation of excess death means that deaths had been running lower than expected based on the trend of the previous years.
At far right are head-to-head comparisons using selected time windows of 17 to 39 weeks. Excess deaths, measured as average daily excess deaths per million (DEDpM), accumulated at least twice as fast in the 3 nations with high jab rates compared to Denmark.