Posted on 04/16/2021 5:29:50 PM PDT by blueplum
Anyone not getting cancer treatment now is an idiot. Anyone not getting screening is mentally defective.
Hospitals, labs, and cancer centers have been open since last fall.
Most elective surgery was restarted last October. I had one on November 5th, and it’s been busy ever since. (My wife works for a hospital and I listen to their daily “bed call” every morning with my coffee.)
re: wiping out the flu - not so sure about that one
“The final data on flu season 2019/2020 was released by the CDC in April....
PIC Mortality: 12.1% up from 7.2% - (pneumonia/influenza/covid) (article states majority from CCPVirus but doesn’t break it out)
hospitalization rate: 0.7 per 100,000 population
“Between October 1, 2019 and April 4, 2020, the flu resulted in:
39 to 56 million illnesses
410,000 to 740,000 hospitalizations
24,000 to 62,000 deaths
195 pediatric deaths (one in 2021)
https://hive.rochesterregional.org/2020/01/Flu-season-2020
>>410,000 to 740,000 hospitalizations
Wild assed guess. Just as they did with H1N1. They stopped counting in 2009 and started guessing all the way through 2010.
They then settled on the middle number between their high estimate and low estimate.
78% of people with Covid that needed ventilators or died from Covid had been obese. Wanna increase your chances of surviving Covid?
thanks for the link :)
The first case, in Austria, had low platelet counts. But the Austrian woman had clots in veins and arteries, same as seen in covid, and similar to a rare heperin reaction which is skimmed in the above article.
In your linked summary, “ cerebral venous thrombosis (n = 9), splanchnic-vein thrombosis (n = 3), pulmonary embolism (n = 3), and other sites (n = 4). Five patients experienced disseminated intravascular coagulation. “
So are there two different types of clotting reactions going on or one? At first, the question was raised, were the clots actually due to some sort of interaction with Birth Control or hormone therapy? But it was said (the next day), that vaccine-suspected clotting is in the brain, and that’s why it was different than deep vein clotting in BC or hormone therapy. Is there no difference?.
Also, I followed on to the paper iself looking for platelet info. The average platelet count of patients was 20,000. (the original Austrian patient at 18,000 considered ‘very low’). “Normal” platelet counts should be in the 150K-450K range:
“All the patients presented with concomitant thrombocytopenia (median nadir of platelet count, approximately 20,000 per cubic millimeter; range, 9000 to 107,000)
https://www.acc.org/latest-in-cardiology/journal-scans/2021/04/12/19/01/thrombotic-thrombocytopenia-after-chadox1
I don’t know what all this means, but it did kind of jump off the page at me, so might be important, or not
Footnotes:
Moderna and Pfizer didn’t help Johnson & Johnson study blood clot risks
“...one study suggested that blood clots were as prevalent with Pfizer and Moderna’s vaccines as with the AstraZeneca vaccine, according to MarketWatch.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/moderna-and-pfizer-didn-t-help-johnson-johnson-study-blood-clot-risks/ar-BB1fK0LH?ocid=msedgntp
Blood clots as prevalent with Pfizer and Moderna vaccine as with AstraZeneca’s: study
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/blood-clots-as-prevalent-with-pfizer-and-moderna-vaccine-as-with-astrazenecas-report-2021-04-15
Cerebral venous thrombosis: a retrospective cohort study of 513,284 confirmed COVID-19 cases and a comparison with 489,871 people receiving a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine
https://osf.io/a9jdq/
You might like Dr. Roger Seheult's MedCram Coronavirus Pandemic Update 61: Blood Clots & Strokes in COVID-19 which was put out a year ago.
The two MedCram COVID Updates I linked do not discuss the connection of blood clotting, bleeds, and low platelet counts to vaccines, but discuss how COVID causes coagulation and micro clots.
Johnson and Johnson Vaccine Pause: A Rare Blood Clot Called Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis (CVST).
Thanks. I’m was a big fan of Dr. Sehautl’s lectures. Difficult topics made easier to understand.
Thank you for this information.
As someone who was diagnosed with ITP last year, reading this and your article above gives me additional pause in deciding to get avaccination.
While not super low, my numbers average under 120.
Any additional information on this, please polling me.
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