westopher | 12-19-2021 07:36 PM | Directly from stats canada
23,547 excess deaths in 2020. I'm only asking you rhetorical questions, because the whole point is that you don't have the answer.
That has a negative effect on the healthcare system. The one you said has always been strained anyways. So when you add more pressure to a strained system, it's not that complicated to see, that's bad. Quote:
To understand both the direct and indirect consequences of the pandemic, it is important to measure excess mortality, which occurs when there are more deaths than expected in a given period. It should be noted that, even without a pandemic, there is always some year-to-year variation in the number of people who die in a given week. This means that the number of expected deaths should fall within a certain range of values. There is evidence of excess mortality when weekly deaths are consistently higher than the expected number, but especially when they exceed the range of what is expected over several consecutive weeks.
From March 2020 to the beginning of June 2021, there were an estimated 23,547 excess deaths in Canada, or 6.7% more deaths than what would be expected were there no pandemic, after accounting for changes in the population, such as aging. Over this same period, 24,910 deaths were directly attributed to COVID-19. While COVID-19 deaths were still observed, significant excess mortality has not been observed nationally for the total population using the provisional death data since February 2021.
Building on insights based on excess mortality, age-standardized mortality rates for 2020—which are adjusted to account for changes in population size and age composition—are compared with previous years to better understand how overall mortality trends for certain age groups may have been driven by different causes of death.
Overall mortality rates in 2020 increased for all age groups compared with previous years—particularly for the youngest and oldest populations. However, while COVID-19 appeared to be the main driver for increased mortality rates in 2020 among older populations, for younger age groups, increases in unintentional poisonings (which includes overdoses) were also a factor.
| Quote:
Originally Posted by Zedbra
(Post 9048070)
So, your source must have data to back up every word you say - I saw how you hated anyone not vaxxed earlier. Cool story, yet all verbal. My wife works in a liquor store - has hundreds of people in there a day. Not one CV in the group, never locked down, but so scary. lol. Don't let facts interfere with your heart string woke shit. You ask questions yet want to put words in mouths, that is the norm now. Hate. Hate it up. Your online opinion is better than the 'science'.
So, anecdotes aside, StatsCan posted this last week - go ahead, look it up, don't let your strife stories sway your opinion. Interesting how almost no one had influenza last year and we had less deaths than average - incredible pandemic. Scary . Scary stories. Gotta love the part where it states it is not higher than influenza numbers and also that if someone has a pre existing condition but has Covid when they die, that number is counted as Covid - and it still lowered our overall deaths. It's the biggest scam, sold to the biggest suckers
| No ones putting words in your mouth here. You are directly conflicting with info thats posted from the website you are referencing. |