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98.5% of Canada's 'covid deaths' were in long term care homes.
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Depending on what definition of "long term care home" you're using, figures of how many old people live in long term care varies between 118,000 and 143,000.
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So using the average figure of 130k, living in long term care for 2.5 years (and then dying), you should have 52,000 people dying in long term care annually under ordinary circumstances.
Point: These were people who were about to die anyway. If there were excess deaths in the long term care facilities, at least some (if not most, or all) of those can certainly be attributed to the panic that caused staff to abandon long term care facilities, leaving their patients to die.
if 98.5% of the deaths were long term care... if you compound that with the figure that the CDC released a while ago that only 6% of deaths were actual and that 94% involved co-morbidities....
so only 6% of the 98.5% can truly be attributed to "corona" ?
Am I getting this right? That may even be too many. Prob slipped a couple through the cracks.
Which comes out to 0.075% of those 12,000 death being "truly attributable to covid", or nine people. Which is easily within the margin of error.
For context, the flu kills 3,500 Canadians annually.
Oh, and then there's this: https://twitter.com/TOPublicHealth/status/1275888390060285967?s=20
unbelievable. What will it take for people to wake up