News Round-Up
17 November 2024
by Will Jones
Police Investigate Former Labour MP for Calling Hamas “Islamists”
16 November 2024
by Will Jones
A new study from the Czech Republic confirms that Covid vaccines have around zero efficacy against death, with any apparent effect an illusion due to biases in the data, says epidemiologist Prof Eyal Shahar.
An epidemiologist who called it right from the start, on Covid (over-hyped), lockdowns (useless, deadly) and vaccines (effectiveness overplayed, harms underplayed), Prof Eyal Shahar looks back at his articles since 2020.
The effectiveness of the fourth Covid vaccine dose against death was around zero, a new analysis of official ONS data by top public health scientist Professor Eyal Shahar shows.
The true effectiveness of the first Covid booster was short-lived, if meaningful at all, once inherent biases are corrected for, says Prof Eyal Shahar. Peak protection was somewhere between mediocre and zero.
A study of nursing home residents in Israel shows clear evidence of vaccine-related deaths, says Prof. Eyal Shahar. The vaccine should therefore be withdrawn for the elderly and new trials undertaken.
Many assume that Covid vaccines saved millions of lives. However, public health expert Prof Eyal Shahar shows that once you correct for the 'healthy vaccinee' bias, vaccine effectiveness against death is around zero.
A paper in the Lancet claims the Pfizer vaccine averted 5,000 deaths in Israel. Prof Eyal Shahar says this is nonsense – and a comparison with Sweden proves it.
An Israeli Government survey showed that side-effects of the Pfizer vaccine hospitalised people hundreds of times more often than is 'safe' – but the results were downplayed, says Dr. Eyal Shahar.
Danish Government scientists have written a paper that downplays the scale of deaths since the vaccine rollout. Professor Eyal Shahar explains why they are wrong.
It is impossible to reconcile a highly effective Covid vaccine with the excess mortality in Denmark since 2021, says Professor of Public Health Eyal Shahar.
It is commonly claimed that Covid vaccines are highly effective against death from COVID-19, but the data do not support this claim, writes Professor Eyal Shahar.
Dr. Eyal Shahar, Professor Emeritus of Public Health at the University of Arizona, draws on official data sources to estimate the short-term fatality rate of the COVID-19 vaccines, which he calls "unacceptable".
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