Data Manipulation Created COVID-19 Pandemic
THIS CHANGED EVERYTHING!!
In March 2020, a team of investigators led by Dr. Henry Ealy (Henele) (professor, Arizona State University):
- started looking at CDC data on Covid-19 cases and fatalities, comparing it to daily live data from Italy and South Korea (China not verifiable) – there were significant anomalies, that grew with each day
- delving deeper into how the CDC was collecting data, they saw the National Vital Statistics Systems (NVSS) March 24 guidelines and discovered a significant change ** had occurred. Specifically for Covid-19 fatalities, the rule was changed to have covid-19 (contributing conditions) moved from Part 2 to Part 1, and pre-existing conditions moved from Part 1 to Part 2. So for example, if someone had “rupture of myocardium” listed as cause of death (part 1), brought on by coronary artery disease over several years – and with covid-19 in part 2 because of a positive test – the two things were switched around!
who had the authority to do this?
NO ONE.A federal agency has the ability to propose a data change, at which time it would be registered in the Federal Register. At that point, federal oversight by the Office of Management and Budget kicks in, and the proposed change is opened up for public comment.
They did not register the proposed change, and there was no oversight and no possibility for the public to comment on the change. Basically, what happened is that these changes were simply implemented without following any of the prescribed rules. They acted unilaterally, contrary to specific U.S. laws about accountability and transparency:
1. 1946 – Administrative Procedures Act
2. 1980 – Paperwork Reduction Act
3. 1995 – above amended, making Office of Management and Budget (OMB) the oversight body for all federal agencies’ data
4. 2002 – Information Quality Act, requiring federal agencies to meet explicit criteria in order for their data to be published and analyzed
who was responsible?
WE DON’T KNOW.To identify the culprits, the team sent out formal grand jury investigation petitions to every U.S. attorney and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), requesting a thorough, independent and transparent investigation.
“We did it at both state and federal levels. We have sent physical copies to every U.S. attorney and their aides. We sent out over 247 mailings in October [2020],” Henele explains. “We sent out an additional 20 to 30 to various people at the Department of Justice.
They would have the ability to call a grand jury, and that grand jury would have the ability to subpoena all those records to determine who were at fault … All we need is one U.S. attorney. All we need is one person at the Department of Justice to take up the cause.”
– in Oct. 2020 the investigators published a paper in Science (Public Health Policy): COVID-19 Data Collection, Comorbidity & Federal Law: A Historical Retrospective →
** Special Rules for COVID-19 Fatalities Were Implemented
In March 2020, there was a significant change made to the definition of what a COVID-19 fatality was. As explained by Henele, there’s a handbook on death reporting, which has been in use since 2003. There are two key sections on a death certificate. In the first part, the cause of death is detailed. In the second part, contributing factors are listed. (view two examples)
Contributing factors are not necessarily statistically recorded. It’s the first part, the actual cause of death, that is most important for statistical accounting.
On March 24, 2020, the NVSS updated its guidelines on how to report and track COVID-19-related deaths.
“They were saying that COVID-19 should be listed in Part 1 for statistical tracking, but [only] in cases where it is proven to have caused death, or was assumed to have caused death,” Henele explains.
“What was really concerning about this document was that it specifically stated that any preexisting conditions should be moved from Part 1, where it has been put for 17 years, into Part 2.
So, it was basically taking this and saying, ‘We’re going to create exclusive rules for COVID-19 and we’re going to do a 180° for this single disease…’
The big problem with that is that now you remove the ability for a medical examiner, a coroner, a physician, to interpret [the cause of death] based upon the collective health history of that patient …
Contributing factors are not necessarily statistically recorded. It’s the first part, the actual cause of death, that is most important for statistical accounting.
On March 24, 2020, the NVSS updated its guidelines on how to report and track COVID-19-related deaths.
“They were saying that COVID-19 should be listed in Part 1 for statistical tracking, but [only] in cases where it is proven to have caused death, or was assumed to have caused death,” Henele explains.
“What was really concerning about this document was that it specifically stated that any preexisting conditions should be moved from Part 1, where it has been put for 17 years, into Part 2.
So, it was basically taking this and saying, ‘We’re going to create exclusive rules for COVID-19 and we’re going to do a 180° for this single disease…’
The big problem with that is that now you remove the ability for a medical examiner, a coroner, a physician, to interpret [the cause of death] based upon the collective health history of that patient …
TO SUMMARIZE:
- Dr. Henry Ealy and his team started looking at CDC data on COVID-19 cases and fatalities in mid-March 2020, quickly realizing the agency was vastly exaggerating fatalities
- Over-reporting of fatalities was enabled by a March 2020 change in how cause of death is reported on death certificates. Rather than listing COVID-19 as a contributing cause in cases where people died from other underlying conditions, it was to be listed as the primary cause
- As of August 23, 2020, the CDC reported 161,392 fatalities caused by COVID-19. Had the long-standing, original guidelines for death reporting been used, there would have only been 9,684 total fatalities due to COVID-19
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CDC: 94% of COVID-19 deaths had contributing medical conditions
Aug.30, 2020
ATLANTA, Ga. (NBC25/WKRC) – The Centers for Disease Control released information showing how many people who died from COVID-19 had contributing medical conditions that contributed to their death.
Click here to read the entire report from the CDC.
The CDC said:
Table 3 shows the types of health conditions and contributing causes mentioned in conjunction with deaths involving coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). For 6% of the deaths, COVID-19 was the only cause mentioned. For deaths with conditions or causes in addition to COVID-19, on average, there were 2.6 additional conditions or causes per death.
The following are the top contributing medical conditions linked with COVID-19 deaths.
- Influenza and pneumonia
- Respiratory failure
- Hypertensive disease
- Diabetes
- Vascular and unspecified dementia
- Cardiac Arrest
- Heart failure
- Renal failure
- Intentional and unintentional injury, poisoning and other adverse events
- Other medical conditions
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