Similar claims have also been made by Senator Dr. Scott Jensen from Minnesota who said Hospitals are getting paid more to list patients as COVID-19.
Dr. Annie Bukacek
In a brief video presentation, Dr. Bukacek blows the whistle on the way the CDC is instructing physicians to exaggerate COVID 19 deaths on death certificates:
Few people know how much individual power and leeway is given to the physician, coroner, or medical examiner, signing the death certificate. How do I know this? I've been filling out death certificates for over 30 years.
More often than we want to admit, we don't know with certainty the cause of death when we fill out death certificates. That is just life. We are doctors, not God. Autopsies are rarely performed and even when an autopsy is done the actual cause of death is not always clear. Physicians make their best guesstimate and fill out the form. Then that listed cause of death... is entered into a vital records data bank to use for statistical analysis, which then gives out inaccurate numbers, as you can imagine. Those inaccurate numbers then become accepted as factual information even though much of it is false.
So even before we heard of COVID-19, death certificates were based on assumptions and educated guesses that go unquestioned. When it comes to COVID-19 there is the additional data skewer, that is - get this — there is no universal definition of COVID-19 death. The Centers for Disease Control, updated from yesterday, April 4th, still states that mortality, quote unquote, data includes both confirmed and presumptive positive cases of COVID-19. That's from their website.
Translation? The CDC counts both true COVID-19 cases and speculative guesses of COVID-19 the same. They call it death by COVID-19. They automatically overestimate the real death numbers, by their own admission. Prior to COVID-19, people were more likely to get an accurate cause of death written on their death certificate if they died in the hospital. Why more accurate when a patient dies in the hospital? Because hospital staff has physical examination findings labs, radiologic studies, et cetera, to make a good educated guess. It is estimated that 60 percent of people die in the hospital. But even [with] those in-hospital deaths, the cause of death is not always clear, especially in someone with multiple health conditions, each of which could cause the death.
Comment: While traffic is a breeze right now in Moscow because of the lockdown, several videos have emerged of ambulance traffic jams in the city - containing "suspected" cases of Covid-19, or pneumonia: In an apparent snub to Trump, the UK has pledged $248 million to the WHO and charities. Couldn't that money be better spent locally? On a positive note, patients at two UK hospitals will start receiving hydroxychloroquine treatment (which the rest of the world is already using). Then there's this, which shows how absurd the emergency policies have become:
Meanwhile, Italy saw its lowest daily death toll in three weeks. Things are turning around there.
But Netanyahu has suspended all flights from the US, just a day after Trump threatened to sanction countries denying acceptance of their citizens' return from the US. German officials have had to apologize after French people were "insulted and spat on" in a border town, and told to "go back" to their "corona-ridden country". Ahh, primitive tribalism at its best!
Turkey's interior minister resigned after a bungled curfew announcement for the weekend caused chaos. Erdogan rejected the resignation.
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