Note: This Substack is a follow-up or extension of a previous Substack of the top-10 most-vaccinated nations — where vaccines led to more death than COVID did. It extends to more nations, and for a longer period of time (+/- 360 days) before and after vaccine rollout dates.
The 250-plus Club is not a club that you want to belong to. It means that you’ve administered 250 COVID shots for every 100 people. Half of these top-19 “vaccinators” of the world had negative excess mortality before vaccine (COVID, by this measure, wasn’t harming them).
These regions are marked in light blue in the Excel sheet below.
In Cuba, Uruguay, and Peru, disturbingly high excess deaths per million (DEDpM) were maintained for 360-days post vaccine-rollout:
[click on image above to enlarge it]
To give perspective on the 6 - 13 DEDpM found in Cuba, Uruguay, and Peru after vaccines rolled out, you can compare it to really bad flu.
One of the worst national experiences from the worst recent flu (2017/18) was in the Netherlands for the year of 2018 — when the average DEDpM was 1.5 daily excess deaths per million.
A dependent samples t-test on the mean of differences in death rates before and after vaccine revealed a statistically-significant increase in the death rate of +2 DEDpM (p-value, one-tailed: 0.008) after engaging in very high vaccination.
That’s twice the original death rate increase that COVID alone was causing in 2020 in these regions.
Reference
[Average daily excess death during 2018 in the Netherlands was 1.5 per million; peak daily death (Week 10) was 9.9 per million] — van Asten L, Harmsen CN, Stoeldraijer L, Klinkenberg D, Teirlinck AC, de Lange MMA, Meijer A, van de Kassteele J, van Gageldonk-Lafeber AB, van den Hof S, van der Hoek W. Excess Deaths during Influenza and Coronavirus Disease and Infection-Fatality Rate for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2, the Netherlands. Emerg Infect Dis. 2021 Feb;27(2):411-420. doi: 10.3201/eid2702.202999. Epub 2021 Jan 4. PMID: 33395381; PMCID: PMC7853586. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7853586/