Weekly excess death percentages move around more than annual excess death percentages. With annual excess death percentages, even numbers that are in the single-digits, such as 8% or 9% yearly excess death, would be deemed to be “very high.”
And though it is not uncommon to find individual weeks with 8% or 9% weekly excess death, finding a week with 20% excess death in it would be considered to be high, given that the standard deviation in weekly deaths is about one-third of that (about 7%).
A very conservative value for “very high weekly excess death” — one high enough where all parties would agree that it is “very high” — may be something like 70% excess weekly death, as when 1.7 times as many people as expected die that week.
The time-line of the 485 of the instances of such high excess death around the world reveals a higher concentration of them after jabs rolled out:
Evidence suggests that COVID jabs harm us, because there was a greater concentration of “very high” excess deaths after jabs rolled out versus before.
Do the boosters show a higher death rate after, I wonder?