by Malcolm Kendrick
September 06, 2020
from
RT Website
Spanish
version
Malcolm Kendrick, doctor and author who works as a GP in
the National Health Service in England.
His
blog can be read
here and his book,
'Doctoring Data - How to Sort Out Medical Advice from
Medical Nonsense,'
is available
here. |
Adriana Cardenas,
a medical technologist processes test samples
for the coronavirus at the AdventHealth Tampa labs
on June 25, 2020 in Tampa, Florida.
© Getty Images / Octavio Jones
How a simple but
fatal math mistake
by US Covid-19
'experts'
caused the world
to panic
and order
lockdowns...
In February, US Covid guru
Anthony Fauci predicted the
virus was 'akin to a severe flu' and would therefore kill around 0.1
percent of people.
Then fatality rate
predictions were somehow mixed up to make it look ten times
WORSE...
When you strip everything
else out, the reason for lockdown comes from a single figure: one
percent.
This was the prediction
that Covid, if left unchecked,
would kill around one percent of us.
You may not think that percentage is enormous, but one percent of
the population of the world is 70 million people - and that's a lot.
It would mean 3.2 million Americans dead, and 670,000 Britons.
But,
where did this one
percent figure come from?
You may find this hard to
believe, but this figure emerged by mistake. A pretty major thing to
make a mistake about, but that's what happened. Such things occur.
On September 23, 1998,
NASA permanently lost contact with the Mars Climate Orbiter. It was
supposed to go round and round the planet looking at the weather,
but instead it hit Mars at around 5,000 mph, exploding into tiny
fragments.
It didn't measure the
weather; it became 'the weather' - for a few seconds anyway.
An investigation later found that the disaster happened because
engineers had used the wrong units. They didn't convert pound
seconds into Newton seconds when doing their
calculations. Imperial, not metric. This, remember, was NASA. An
organization not completely full of numbskulls.
Now you and I probably have no idea of the difference between a
pound second and a Newton second (it's 0.67 - I looked it up). But
you would kind-of hope NASA would. In fact, I am sure they do, but
they didn't notice, so the figures came out wrong.
The initial mistake was
made, and was baked into the figures. Kaboom..!
With Covid, a similar mistake happened.
One type of fatality
rate was substituted for another.
The wrong rate was
then used to predict the likely death rate - and, as with NASA,
no-one picked up the error.
In order to understand
what happened, you have to understand the difference between two
medical terms that sound the same - but are completely different.
Rather like a pound
second or a Newton second.
Which fatality rate,
did you say?
First, there's the Infection Fatality Rate (IFR).
This is the total
number of people who are infected by a disease and the number of
them who die.
This figure includes
those who have no symptoms at all, or only very mild symptoms -
those who stayed at home, coughed a bit and watched Outbreak.
Then there's the Case
Fatality Rate (CFR).
This is the number of
people suffering serious symptoms, who are probably ill enough
to be in hospital.
Clearly, people who
are seriously ill - the "cases" - are going to have a higher
mortality rate than those who are infected, many of whom don't
have symptoms.
Put simply,
all cases are
infections, but not all infections are cases...
Which means that the CFR
will always be far higher than the IFR. With influenza, the CFR is
around ten times as high as the IFR. Covid seems to have a similar
proportion.
Now, clearly, you do not want to get these figures mixed up. By
doing so you would either wildly overestimate, or wildly
underestimate, the impact of Covid. But mix these figures up, they
did.
The error started in America, but didn't end there. In healthcare,
the US is very much the dog that wags the tail. The figures they
come up with are used globally.
On February 28, 2020, an editorial was released by the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Published in the New
England Journal of Medicine, the editorial
stated:
"...the overall
clinical consequences of Covid-19 may ultimately be more akin to
those of a severe seasonal influenza."
They added that influenza
has a CFR of approximately 0.1 percent. One person in a thousand who
gets it badly, dies.
But that quoted CFR for influenza was ten times too low - they meant
to say the IFR, the Infection Fatality Rate, for influenza was 0.1
percent. This was their fatal - quite literally - mistake.
The mistake was compounded. On March 11, the same experts testified
to Congress, stating that Covid's CFR was likely to be about one
percent, so one person dying from a hundred who fell seriously ill.
Which, as time has
passed, has proved to be pretty accurate.
At this meeting, they compared the likely impact of Covid to flu.
But they used the wrong CFR for influenza, the one stated in the
previous NEJM editorial. 0.1 percent, or one in a thousand.
The one that was ten
times too low.
Flu toll 1,000
- Covid toll 10,000
So, they matched up the one percent CFR of Covid with the incorrect
0.1 percent CFR of flu. Suddenly, Covid was going to be ten times as
deadly.
If influenza killed 50, Covid was going to kill 500. If influenza
killed a million, Covid was going to get 10 million. No wonder
Congress, then the world, panicked. Because they were told Covid was
going to be ten times worse than influenza.
They could see three
million deaths in the US alone, and 70 million around the world.
I don't expect you or I to get this sort of thing right. But I
bloody well expect the experts to do so. They didn't. They got their
IFR and CFR mixed up and multiplied the likely impact of Covid by a
factor of ten.
Here's what the paper, "Public
Health Lessons learned from Biases in Coronavirus Mortality
Overestimation", says:
"On March 11, 2020...
based on the data available at the time, Congress was informed
that the estimated mortality rate for the coronavirus was
ten-times higher than for seasonal influenza, which helped
launch a campaign of social distancing, organizational and
business lockdowns, and shelter-in-place orders."
On February 28 it was
estimated that Covid was going to have about the same impact as a
bad influenza season - almost certainly correct.
Eleven days later, the
same group of experts predicted that the mortality rate was going to
be ten times as high. This was horribly, catastrophically,
running-into-Mars-at-5,000-miles-an-hour wrong.
NOTE:
The document's author, Ronald Brown
(of the University of Waterloo in Ontario) said an expert told the
House Committee that the estimated mortality was 10 times higher
than seasonal flu.
This was the main argument for the quarantine.
The expert who, according to Brown, made
the 10x error in his testimony before Congress is by now well known
to all of us,
Anthony Fauci.
Enter the Mad
Modellers of Lockdown
In the UK, the group I call the Mad Modellers of lockdown,
the Imperial College experts, created the same panic. On March 16,
they used an estimated IFR of 0.9 percent to predict that, without
lockdown, Covid would kill around 500,000 in the UK.
Is this prediction anywhere close?
So far, the UK has had around 40,000 Covid deaths. Significantly
less than 0.1 percent, but not that far off.
Of course, people will
say...
"We had lockdown...
without it so many more would have died. Most people have not
been infected…" etc.
To answer this, we need
to know the true IFR.
Is it a 0.1 percent,
or one percent?
If it is one percent,
we have more than 400,000 deaths to go.
If it is 0.1 percent,
this epidemic has run its course. For this year, at least...
With
swine flu, remember that the IFR
started at around two percent. In the end, it was 0.02 percent,
which was five times lower than the lowest estimate during the
outbreak.
The more you test, the
lower the IFR will fall.
So,
where can we look to
get the current figures on the IFR?
The best place to look is
at the country that has tested more people than anywhere else as a
proportion of their population:
Iceland...
As of last week,
Iceland's IFR stood at 0.16 per
cent. It cannot go up from here. It can only fall...
People can't start
dying of a disease they haven't got.
This means that we'll
probably end up with an IFR of about 0.1 percent, maybe less. Not
the 0.02 percent of Swine Flu - somewhere between the two, perhaps.
In short, the 0.1 percent
prophecy has proved to be pretty much bang on.
Which means that we've had all the deaths we were ever going to get.
And which also means that lockdown achieved, almost precisely
nothing with regard to Covid.
No deaths were
prevented...
Mangled beyond
recognition
Yes, we are testing and testing, and finding more so-called cases.
As you will.
But the hospitals and
ICUs are virtually empty. Almost no-one is dying of Covid anymore,
and most of those who do were otherwise very ill. Instead of
celebrating that, we've artificially created a whole new thing to
scare ourselves with. We now call a positive test a Covid "case."
This is not medicine.
A "case" is someone
who has symptoms.
A case is not someone
carrying
tiny amounts of virus in their
nose.
Now, however, you test
positive, and you're a "case." Never in history has medical
terminology been so badly mangled. Never have statistics been so
badly mangled.
When researchers look back at this pandemic, they'll have absolutely
no idea who died because of Covid, or who died - coincidentally -
with it. Everything's been mashed together in a determined effort to
make the virus look as deadly as possible.
Lockdown happened because we were told that Coivid could kill one
percent.
But Covid was never going
to kill more than about 0.1 percent - max.
That's the figure estimated back in February, by the major players
in viral epidemiology. A figure that has turned out to be remarkably
accurate.
Bright guys... bad
mistake.
We've killed
tens of thousands - for nothing
But because we panicked, we've added hugely to the toll.
Excess mortality between
March and May was around 70,000, not the 40,000 who died of/with
Covid. Which means 30,000 may have died directly as a result of the
actions we took.
We protected the young, the children, who are at zero risk of Covid.
But we threw our elderly and vulnerable under a bus. The very group
who should have been shielded. Instead, we caused 20,000 excess
deaths in care homes.
It was government policy to clear out hospitals, and stuff care
homes with patients carrying Covid,
Or discharge them
back to their own homes, to infect their nearest and dearest.
Or any community care
staff who visited them.
We threw - to use health
secretary Matt Hancock's ridiculous phrase - a ring of
steel around care homes.
As it turned out, this
was not to protect them, but to trap the residents, as we turned
their buildings into Covid incubators. Anyone working in care homes,
as I do, knows why we got 20,000 excess deaths. Government policy
did this.
That is far from all the damage.
On top of care homes, the
ONS estimates that 16,000 excess deaths were caused by lockdown.
The heart attacks and
strokes that were not treated.
The empty, echoing
hospitals and A&E units.
The cancer treatments
stopped entirely.
Which means that at least
as many people have died as a result of the draconian actions taken
to combat Covid, as have been killed by the virus itself.
This has been a
slow-motion stampede, where the elderly - in particular - were
trampled to death.
We locked down in
fear.
We killed tens of
thousands unnecessarily, in fear.
We crippled the
economy, and left millions in fear of their livelihoods.
We have trapped
abused women and children at home with their abusers.
We have wiped out
scores of companies, and crushed entire industries.
We stripped out the NHS, and left millions in prolonged pain and
suffering, on
ever lengthening waiting lists,
which have doubled.
There have also been tens
of thousands of delayed cancer diagnoses - the effects of which are
yet to be seen, but the Lancet has estimated at least
sixty thousand years of life will
be lost.
Lockdown can be seen as a complete and utter disaster. And it was
all based on a nonsense, a claim that Covid was going to kill one
percent.
A claim that can now be
seen to be utterly and completely wrong.
Sweden, which did not
lock down, has had a death rate of 0.0058 percent.
It takes a very big
person to admit they have made a horrible, terrible mistake. But a
horrible, terrible mistake has been made.
Let's end this ridiculous
nonsense now.
And vow never to let such
monumental stupidity happen ever again.
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