That was exactly what I was going to say. NYC plus, MA, CT, MI, PA - several states had hospitals following the protocols, and I have to wonder how many people suffering an anxiety attack thought they couldn't breathe because of covid and endured death by ventilator and neglect in a New England hospital. I watched Andrew Cuomo's press …
That was exactly what I was going to say. NYC plus, MA, CT, MI, PA - several states had hospitals following the protocols, and I have to wonder how many people suffering an anxiety attack thought they couldn't breathe because of covid and endured death by ventilator and neglect in a New England hospital. I watched Andrew Cuomo's press conferences - 80% of people placed on the ventilator were dying - that's what he said.
But we already knew this was true because of Louisiana. Mardi Gras is celebrated all over the state for the entire month of February. This is why LA was a hotspot. The deaths didn't spike until late March/early April, 1-2 weeks *after* the CDC and NIH protocols were implemented.
Good point on the big spike in deaths in Louisiana. That probably was a combination of real virus spread (from February) and then all the panic and iatgrogenic protocols kicking in on top of that.
It seems to me the excess deaths were disproportionately occurring in only about five cities - NYC, Detroit, Louisiana (New Orleans), a few more. I think they were also almost all happening at hospitals that serve the poor.
That was exactly what I was going to say. NYC plus, MA, CT, MI, PA - several states had hospitals following the protocols, and I have to wonder how many people suffering an anxiety attack thought they couldn't breathe because of covid and endured death by ventilator and neglect in a New England hospital. I watched Andrew Cuomo's press conferences - 80% of people placed on the ventilator were dying - that's what he said.
But we already knew this was true because of Louisiana. Mardi Gras is celebrated all over the state for the entire month of February. This is why LA was a hotspot. The deaths didn't spike until late March/early April, 1-2 weeks *after* the CDC and NIH protocols were implemented.
Good point on the big spike in deaths in Louisiana. That probably was a combination of real virus spread (from February) and then all the panic and iatgrogenic protocols kicking in on top of that.
It seems to me the excess deaths were disproportionately occurring in only about five cities - NYC, Detroit, Louisiana (New Orleans), a few more. I think they were also almost all happening at hospitals that serve the poor.
I'd have to look at weekly death death for the state and for the city
No excess deaths in Louisiana until then, right?
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1qJkiJMUlFiINifZlZp3rKnesUDa15PLHaPYr8LVcH1Y/edit?usp=sharing
Here is quick dump of total deaths for the entire state 2014-2022.
100% normal mortality until the week ending 3/28 (week 13), jumping +30%.
The Google Doc is just stripped out Pivot Table dump, can re-create the data from the CDC sources I linked.