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Official government data has revealed that Australia has suffered a historic surge of all-cause excess deaths among the nation’s universally Covid-vaccinated population.
A major new study has found that Australia, which has one of the highest vaccination rates in the world, recorded skyrocketing excess deaths after the Covid mRNA “vaccines” were rolled out in early 2021.
The study was conducted by a team of medical and population health researchers at the University of Nicosia Medical School in Nicosia, Cyprus.
Led by Professor Christiana Demetriou, PhD, the researchers sought to investigate excess all-cause mortality across 21 nations during 2022.
Importantly, Dr. Demetriou and colleagues urge in their “key message” that all nations investigated experienced continued all-cause excess mortality during 2022.
The researchers compared excess deaths from all causes in 2022 to the data for pre-pandemic years.
Experts around the world have been raising questions about surging excess mortality rates during and after the pandemic.
Despite the pandemic being declared in 2020, all-cause excess deaths only spiked after Covid mRNA “vaccines” were deployed in 2021, and not before.
Of particular concern among scientists and data experts is the fact that data for all-cause excess mortality rates shows nothing out of the ordinary during the first year of the pandemic.
However, the data shows unprecedented death surges around the world after the “vaccines” were rolled out.
In addition, a majority of the excess mortality in 2022 was higher than in 2021 and 2020.
Australia recorded historic highs for excess mortality in 2022, despite the pandemic being over.
Cyprus-based Prof. Demetriou and colleagues observed excess mortality estimated due to COVID-19 declined in all countries except for one notable exception—Australia.
The authors here refer to this as the “impact of indirect pandemic-related effects on mortality.”
Several independent analyses have found excess mortality associated with Covid “vaccines” such as this analysis.
Published recently in the peer-reviewed European Journal of Public Health, the Cyprus-based researchers announce that “nationally published COVID-19 mortality estimates do not fully encompass the extent of the pandemic’s impact on mortality.”
Focusing on understanding total weekly excess mortality for 2022, the team analyzed mortality data across 2020-2022, from 21 countries participating in the international consortium (C-MOR), which provided data for examination.
