Anonymous ID: 76c1e3 Aug. 27, 2023, 6:27 a.m. No.19440938   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0955

https://twitter.com/CartlandDavid/status/1695412429256065112

 

Dr David Cartland

@CartlandDavid

HORROR: All Cause Mortality hits epidemic levels.

 

Children under the age of 24 are dying at 40% excess mortality over the last TWO years.

Anonymous ID: 76c1e3 Aug. 27, 2023, 6:28 a.m. No.19440943   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1416 >>1506 >>1623

https://www.lifenews.com/2023/08/25/since-it-cant-kill-babies-planned-parenthood-is-doing-free-vasectomies-in-a-trailer-called-the-nutcracker/

 

Since It Can’t Kill Babies, Planned Parenthood is Doing Free Vasectomies in a Trailer Called “The “Nutcracker”

 

Now that men cannot rely on abortions anymore to shirk their parental responsibilities, many are requesting permanent sterilizations or vasectomies instead. And the abortion chain Planned Parenthood is stepping up to meet their requests.

 

America’s biggest abortion business is doing more and more vasectomies. And its doing them for free in a mobile trailer ironically called “The Nutcracker.” You can’t make this up.

 

Here’s what’s happening in Missouri, a pro-life state where unborn babies are protected from abortions.

 

Planned Parenthood in Missouri will carry out 100 free vasectomies in October for uninsured or underinsured men to celebrate World Vasectomy Day.

 

Here’s more:

 

Planned Parenthood is offering free vasectomies to uninsured young men, despite the fact the procedure may not be as reversible as people think.

 

In October, Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region and Southwest Missouri (PPSLR) will perform 100 free vasectomies for uninsured and underinsured patients in honor of World Vasectomy Day at three of its locations.

 

HELP LIFENEWS SAVE BABIES FROM ABORTION! Please help LifeNews.com with a donation!

 

It is the third year PPSLR will offer vasectomies, a 20 to 30-minute surgery performed by a doctor that blocks small tubes called the vas deferens in the scrotum to stop sperm from leaving a man’s body and causing pregnancy.

 

Forty appointments will be available at the Central West End Health Center in St Louis on October 19. Thirty will be available in the town of Rolla on October 20 and 30 will be available in Springfield on October 21.

 

Dr Esgar Guarin, a reproductive health doctor, will be returning to the area with his mobile vasectomy trailer, which he calls ‘The Nutcracker.’

 

Dr Guarin told Springfield News-Leader: ‘It’s worse to go to the dentist, I always tell my patients.’

 

No, it’s worse to kill babies in abortions, so if this somehow results in fewer babies being killed in abortions, that’s a good thing.

Anonymous ID: 76c1e3 Aug. 27, 2023, 6:30 a.m. No.19440952   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0957 >>0967 >>1416 >>1506 >>1623

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/health/covid-warning-brits-face-significantly-30759581

 

Covid warning as Brits face 'significantly elevated' risk of death two years after infection

 

A new study on the long term effects on Covid has found that patients who were hospitalised still have a great increase risk of death even as far as two years after infection

 

Experts have issued a fresh Covid warning after a new study found that the risk of death was “significantly elevated” for years after a person was hospitalised with the virus.

 

In early 2020, the globe was rocked as Coronavirus spread from China across the world, causing millions of deaths and rocking the global economy. Even after the speedy vaccine response, and attempts to continue life as normal following the virus, for some that’s impossible.

 

Long Covid has plagued the lives of countless Brits, and people across the world. One new study has made a series of shocking revelations that those suffering from it, and originally hospitalised by the disease, face far greater chances of dying from an array of issues.

 

Previous work looked at how respiratory and pulmonary issues persisted after Covid infection for weeks and months after catching it. But the new study, published in Nature Medicine, is thought to be the first to look at the health complications and threat of death that can linger beyond the initial months and even first year.

 

It found that even as far as two years down the line, people who were hospitalised by Covid faced a far greater chance of dying and severely worse health complications like lung problems, diabetes, and general fatigue.

 

After two years, the “cumulative burden of health loss due to PASC [long Covid]” does finally decline. But the study warned “it remains unclear whether and over what time horizon the risk of postacute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 attenuates and becomes not significant”.

 

For patients who weren’t hospitalised by the killer virus, it takes just six months for the risk of death to no longer be significant. However, despite this, they aren’t spared from the after effects of Covid altogether and have an increased risk of over 20 medical conditions. Among these conditions, it includes: silent killers like cardiovascular issues and blood clotting trouble; diabetes, gastrointestinal problems and kidney disorders.

 

The study’s senior author Ziyad Al-Aly, a clinical epidemiologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said that: “A lot of people think, ‘I got covid, I got over it and I’m fine,” but “maybe you’ve forgotten about the SARS-CoV-2 infection … but covid did not forget about you. It’s still wreaking havoc in your body,”

 

Long Covid is still not fully understood and often different bodies investigating the phenomena define it differently. The study looked at medical records for almost 140,000 US veterans who were diagnosed with Covid early in the pandemic and used a control group of almost six million who weren’t known to have been infected.

 

But the study highlighted that the Covid survivors they tracked were not entirely representative of the population because as military veterans they were older and mostly male. Whereas the veterans were nine out of ten male, in the general population women account for slightly over half of Long Covid patients.

 

The Washington Post reported that Francesca Beaudoin, an A&E medic and epidemiologist who oversees Brown University’s long-Covid initiative, said the findings “capture what we are hearing at the narrative level from patients — that … the systems [affected after recovery from Covid’s acute phase] are varied, that it results in loss of quality of life, loss of work and school.”

Anonymous ID: 76c1e3 Aug. 27, 2023, 6:34 a.m. No.19440967   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1416 >>1506 >>1623

>>19440952

>A new study on the long term effects on Covid has found that patients who were hospitalised still have a great increase risk of death even as far as two years after infection

 

The Study:

Postacute sequelae of COVID-19 at 2 years

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-023-02521-2

 

Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection can lead to postacute sequelae in multiple organ systems, but evidence is mostly limited to the first year postinfection. We built a cohort of 138,818 individuals with SARS-CoV-2 infection and 5,985,227 noninfected control group from the US Department of Veterans Affairs and followed them for 2 years to estimate the risks of death and 80 prespecified postacute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) according to care setting during the acute phase of infection. The increased risk of death was not significant beyond 6 months after infection among nonhospitalized but remained significantly elevated through the 2 years in hospitalized individuals. Within the 80 prespecified sequelae, 69% and 35% of them became not significant at 2 years after infection among nonhospitalized and hospitalized individuals, respectively. Cumulatively at 2 years, PASC contributed 80.4 (95% confidence interval (CI): 71.6–89.6) and 642.8 (95% CI: 596.9–689.3) disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) per 1,000 persons among nonhospitalized and hospitalized individuals; 25.3% (18.9–31.0%) and 21.3% (18.2–24.5%) of the cumulative 2-year DALYs in nonhospitalized and hospitalized were from the second year. In sum, while risks of many sequelae declined 2 years after infection, the substantial cumulative burden of health loss due to PASC calls for attention to the care needs of people with long-term health effects due to SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Anonymous ID: 76c1e3 Aug. 27, 2023, 6:38 a.m. No.19440985   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0999 >>1124 >>1358 >>1393 >>1416 >>1506 >>1550 >>1623

Deaths by Vaccination Status Data’ for 2023 in England. Deaths in VACCINATED made 95% of total

Release:

Deaths involving COVID-19 by vaccination status, England: deaths occurring between 1 April 2021 and 31 May 2023

8,330 deaths were Vaccinated 95%

436 deaths were Unvaccinated 5%

 

https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/bulletins/deathsinvolvingcovid19byvaccinationstatusengland/deathsoccurringbetween1april2021and31may2023

 

Deaths involving COVID-19 by vaccination status, England: deaths occurring between 1 April 2021 and 31 May 2023

Age-standardised mortality rates for deaths involving coronavirus (COVID-19) by vaccination status, broken down by age group.

 

Deaths occurring between 1 April 2021 and 31 May 2023 in England.

Anonymous ID: 76c1e3 Aug. 27, 2023, 7:27 a.m. No.19441262   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://twitter.com/stclairashley/status/1695650611079848257

 

Ashley St. Clair

 

@stclairashley

Incredibly hard to watch but this is what is happening to a growing number of children across the country.

 

12 year olds getting implants in their arms to stop puberty

 

Heartbreaking