Excess Mortality and the Effect of the Covid-19 Vaccines. Part 1: European Data.
Preprint, 2023
country compares to its average rate of excess mortality (EM) in the pandemic to date. We find that, in the linear regression, the correlation between
average EM and vaccination rate is strongly negative, a priori evidence to support the claim that the Covid vaccines have saved many lives. However, a
closer analysis of the timeline suggests otherwise. The correlation was already strongly negative before the vaccines were rolled out and is only
weakly negative thereafter. In theory, survivor bias could still explain this shift, especially since waves of EM closely align with Covid waves. However,
we find in addition that about half of our 28 countries experienced higher EM in 2022 than in 2021, and all that did so have higher than average vaccination rates. This is something which survivor bias cannot explain and raises the real possibility that the vaccines have not just failed to save
many lives, but may have already caused net harm. Moreover, any such harm may be ongoing since we find that EM and vaccination rates have been consistently positively correlated since April 2022. We show that all these findings are robust to several different ways of measuring EM and/or vaccination rates. Finally, using public data from Worldometers, we show that the correlation over time of official Covid mortality rates with current vaccination rates closely tracks that of EM rates, even as Covid mortality has waxed and waned and even in the post-omicron period.
all-cause mortality
COVID-19
excess mortality
vaccination
Author
Peter Hegarty
Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Algebra and geometry
Subject Categories
Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology