So, per request, injecting my data. The Daily Beagle collected data on antibiotics prescribing, and found in the UK (and Scotland), Germany and the US, all saw antibiotics either go down during 2020, or "flatline" with an abnormally steady rate:
So, per request, injecting my data. The Daily Beagle collected data on antibiotics prescribing, and found in the UK (and Scotland), Germany and the US, all saw antibiotics either go down during 2020, or "flatline" with an abnormally steady rate:
What is known is secondary bacterial infections correlate strongly with death in COVID-19.
In the comments, a contention was raised on the pneumonia datasets. In digging, The Daily Beagle could only find a suspiciously low 358 pneumonia deaths (as underlying cause) in the CDC wonder database for 2019-2020: this included a *broad* selection of pneumonia categories (including one relating, bizarrely, to essential oils? I have no idea why the CDC even lists that).
No country has any case rate datasets on bacterial pneumonia (even for vaccines; the CDC's data doesn't go beyond 2019), and only the US has anything vaguely relating to deaths. Influenza cannot be blamed because the "official" sources claimed it magically disappeared during 2020 (leaving only a 0.2% number of cases during Sept 2020 to May 2021).
The only anomaly I can spot is Scarlet Fever (which isn't so much a fever as a bacterial infection) massively jumped in cases in 2022 in the UK, which went from a 2k yearly average to a 50k+ jump. The WHO has reported this has occurred in a number of countries simultaneously, such as Ireland and Italy.
It isn't clear why, as the shot rollout started late 2020 and there seems to be no uptick anywhere in 2021. I cannot tell if it is delayed onset, or due to some evil antibiotics scheme.
So, per request, injecting my data. The Daily Beagle collected data on antibiotics prescribing, and found in the UK (and Scotland), Germany and the US, all saw antibiotics either go down during 2020, or "flatline" with an abnormally steady rate:
https://thedailybeagle.substack.com/p/how-to-make-a-pandemic-worse
What is known is secondary bacterial infections correlate strongly with death in COVID-19.
In the comments, a contention was raised on the pneumonia datasets. In digging, The Daily Beagle could only find a suspiciously low 358 pneumonia deaths (as underlying cause) in the CDC wonder database for 2019-2020: this included a *broad* selection of pneumonia categories (including one relating, bizarrely, to essential oils? I have no idea why the CDC even lists that).
No country has any case rate datasets on bacterial pneumonia (even for vaccines; the CDC's data doesn't go beyond 2019), and only the US has anything vaguely relating to deaths. Influenza cannot be blamed because the "official" sources claimed it magically disappeared during 2020 (leaving only a 0.2% number of cases during Sept 2020 to May 2021).
The only anomaly I can spot is Scarlet Fever (which isn't so much a fever as a bacterial infection) massively jumped in cases in 2022 in the UK, which went from a 2k yearly average to a 50k+ jump. The WHO has reported this has occurred in a number of countries simultaneously, such as Ireland and Italy.
It isn't clear why, as the shot rollout started late 2020 and there seems to be no uptick anywhere in 2021. I cannot tell if it is delayed onset, or due to some evil antibiotics scheme.
More research required and pending.
OKAY DAILY BEAGLE WE WAIT YOUR RESEARCH..THANK YOU🥰