correlation-canada.org/covid-excess-mortality-125-countries/
Spatiotemporal variation of excess all-cause mortality in the world (125 countries) during the Covid period 2020-2023 regarding socio economic factors and public-health and medical interventions
CORRELATION has published a new report entitled “Spatiotemporal variation of excess all-cause mortality in the world (125 countries) during the Covid period 2020-2023 regarding socio economic factors and public-health and medical interventions” authored by Denis G. Rancourt, Joseph Hickey and Christian Linard.
The report, which consists of 521 pages including hundreds of figures, contains a detailed examination of excess all-cause mortality during the Covid period in 125 countries comprising approximately 35% of the world’s population.
The authors write:
The spatiotemporal variations in national excess all-cause mortality rates allow us to conclude that the Covid-period (2020-2023) excess all-cause mortality in the world is incompatible with a pandemic viral respiratory disease as a primary cause of death. This hypothesis, although believed to be supported by testing campaigns, should be abandoned.
[…]
We describe plausible mechanisms and argue that the three primary causes of death associated with the excess all-cause mortality during (and after) the Covid period are:
- Biological (including psychological) stress from mandates such as lockdowns and associated socio-economic structural changes
- Non-COVID-19-vaccine medical interventions such as mechanical ventilators and drugs (including denial of treatment with antibiotics)
- COVID-19 vaccine injection rollouts, including repeated rollouts on the same populations
Download a copy of the report below:
2024-07-19 Correlation – ACM World – 125 countries – Rancourt-Hickey-LinardDownload