If that’s the case, how is it that the number of deaths for all other causes are at or above their normal levels for 2020?
That may be. But were they counted separately? Every death the hospitals can get paid for is a Chirona death.
I don't understand what that means. Every death requires that a US Standard Certificate of Death be filled out which includes the underlying cause of death in Section 32 Part I. There is only one underlying cause of death.
"Every death the hospitals can get paid for is a Chirona death."
Which, again, doesn't actually make sense in practice. In order to make that work - at scale - you need a million doctors in the US, about 4 million nurses in the US, millions of lab workers, and the families of the victims all engaged in a massive conspiracy to defraud the Federal government so that the hospitals can get ~2% extra income.
Hospitals don't fill out death certificates; doctors do. And if your employer came to you and asked you to commit fraud and medical malpractice, risk your career, risk your license, and risk prison time (to say nothing of the moral and ethical problems with all this) so they can get 2% extra revenue, would you seriously jump right on board?
Would you commit fraud so your employer can make ~2% extra? No? neither would a million US doctors. The numbers are what they are. Start asking WHY they're that high. That question leads to real answers like "well, governors such as Cuomo and Newsom forced nursing homes to accept known-infected patients, so mass infections wiped out a huge number of elderly folks".