Friday, September 2, 2022

Deaths From 'Unknown Causes' Now Leading Cause Of Death In Alberta, Canada

“Unknown causes” are now the leading cause of death in Alberta, Canada



A study published in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases revealed that “unknown causes” are now the leading cause of death in Alberta, Canada – ahead of dementia and Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19)

This development came to light last month as Canadian doctors and a civil liberties lawyers raised concerns about the growing trend. Dementia was the leading cause of death in Alberta from 2016 to 2020.

Listed as the leading causes of death last year in Alberta were unknown causes (3,362), dementia (2,135) and COVID-19 (1,950). Other leading causes of death are chronic ischemic heart disease, malignant neoplasms of the trachea, bronchus and lung, acute myocardial infarction, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus, stroke and accidental poisoning by and exposure to drugs and other substances.

Dr. Daniel Gregson, an associate professor in the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary, said that it’s probably multifactorial, so there could be many factors that are in play.

Health officials and so-called experts are refusing to even consider that the thousands of deaths from unknown causes in just one Canadian province may be connected to COVID-19 vaccines. Instead, they’re trying to pin the blame squarely on COVID.

Gregson noted that a large study conducted in the U.S. found that people with COVID-19 are at a higher risk of heart disease, stroke, pulmonary embolism and death compared to those who were not infected. He failed to mention that multiple studies have shown that vaccinated people are dying at a higher rate from all causes than the unvaccinated. (Related: COVID FACT CHECK: There have been over 223,000 EXCESS DEATHS in America this year so far, above and beyond the flu and all other causes of death COMBINED.)

Deaths from unknown causes have not appeared as a leading cause of death in Alberta until last year, but the number of deaths listed under that category seems to have been increasing since at least 2019. That year, 522 deaths were recorded under this classification before almost tripling to 1,464 in 2020.

Following the publication of the latest data in July 2022, a spokesperson for Service Alberta said that the “other ‘ill-defined and unknown cause of death’ classification is given when a cause of death cannot be determined, or when a death is still under investigation with a medical examiner. Some deaths originally coded in this way are updated as a final determination of the cause of death are determined.”








 Data from the U.K.’s Office for National Statistics (ONS) revealed that there have been 20,000 excess deaths in Englandand Wales since May compared to the previous five-year average. Further data provided by Scotland show 1,500 excess deaths in the same time frame.

The mass Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) booster campaign took place in December 2021. An analysis of those figures concluded that it takes approximately five months from receiving the COVID-19 vaccine for that elevated mortality rate to kick in.


To be more precise, excess deaths have been recorded every single week in England and Wales from the week ending April 22 until at least the week ending August 12, in which 950 excess deaths were recorded against the five-year average.

England and Wales were also recording excess deaths throughout the majority of 2021, but they suddenly fell below the five-year average at the start of 2022. That’s because the ONS changed the five-year average to include 2021 when tens of thousands of excess deaths were recorded in England and Wales.

UK insurance companies report overwhelming surge in death claims

According to a KUSI report, insurance companies were reporting an overwhelming surge in death claims for 18-49 year-olds – highlighting a mysterious spike in deaths that could not be entirely explained by the pandemic. (Related: UK insurers see INCREASE in COVID-related death payouts for 2021.)

In a video interview with KUSI News, which was removed from YouTube, emergency and public health specialist Dr. Kelly Victory explained the concerning rates of increase in reported myocardial infarction, Bell’s palsy and certain neurological conditions.






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