It clearly attempts to make a link to vaccinations
Nope. It's right there in the posted abstract folks: "We use obituary information published in an Amish/Mennonite newspaper to examine excess death among the Amish/Mennonites in 2020".
The paper compares Amish death rates in 2015 to 2019 to those in 2020, after the arrival of the virus. Covid vaccines were not available in that time period.
Attempting to claim the paper has anything to do with covid vaccination is odd, if not misleading.
Again, silly, they make a point of saying that Amish excess deaths mirror the ups and downs of excess deaths of the unvaccinated population. And that is why you posted it. Otherwise neither you or anyone else would care.
Nope. It's right there in the posted abstract folks: "We use obituary information published in an Amish/Mennonite newspaper to examine excess death among the Amish/Mennonites in 2020".
The paper compares Amish death rates in 2015 to 2019 to those in 2020, after the arrival of the virus. Covid vaccines were not available in that time period.
Attempting to claim the paper has anything to do with covid vaccination is odd, if not misleading.
Again, silly, they make a point of saying that Amish excess deaths mirror the ups and downs of excess deaths of the unvaccinated population. And that is why you posted it. Otherwise neither you or anyone else would care.
She's telling us she hasn't read the abstract or the paper folks.
Both of them say "We use obituary information published in an Amish/Mennonite newspaper to examine excess death among the Amish/Mennonites in 2020".
The paper compares Amish death rates in 2015 to 2019 to those in 2020, after the arrival of the virus.
Covid vaccines were not available in that time period, but apparently that means nothing to Kinder12.