Top Professor Raises Alarm over Surge in Sudden Deaths

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A world-renowned Norwegian professor has raised the alarm over data showing surging sudden and unexpected deaths among Covid-vaccinated young people.

Jarle Aarstad is a professor at HVL Business School, Western Norway University of Applied Science.

The celebrated scientist recently had a letter to the editor published in Germany’s prestigious EXCLI Journal.

Aarstad reported on his empirical analysis of cohorts of young people in England.

In a study, Aarstad uncovered data showing soaring sudden deaths in people aged 12-29 years, during 12 weeks after their first, second, and third injections with the COVID-19 mRNA shots.

The data reveals in this younger aged cohort that deaths increased significantly (95 % CIs) in the 10 or 11 weeks after COVID-19 vaccination compared to the first week.

Professor Aarstad said early on in the pandemic he started to significantly question some of the measures taken by his and other governments.

He noted that in Norway by the first several months of the pandemic, the case fatality rate was not much higher than a bad flu.

However, the response in that nation, including lockdowns and shutting schools down would have severe long-lasting impacts.

He would ask questions to himself like, “Why are we imposing such severe measures in Norway, such as keeping children from school, lockdowns, and such given the actual threat faced?”

During the pandemic, there were various points in time along the way that he felt something was just not right.

One game changer from his standpoint, however, was reporting from independent media outlets.

Early on, he started listening to various sources both in Norway and in broader Europe and England.

Professor Aarstad and his family decided that they would not be opting to receive COVID-19 vaccination.

Using his own critical facility, intuition, and education in economics and business Aarstad started crunching numbers.

He found that in most advanced economies after the first waves of vaccination by 2022 a curious observation: heavily vaccinated nations had higher excess death patterns.

A striking observation: the Norwegian professor submitted multiple papers based on data he accessed from Eurostat and other sources.

However, his studies were all rejected by the “settled-science” establishment journals.

Early on during the pandemic and after the first substantial waves of vaccination, nations around the world began reporting a disturbing trend of surges in COVID-19 deaths among the vaccinated.

With Aarstad’s quantitative observations, it seemed like no journal wanted to discuss such a phenomenon.

Then by late 2022, he noticed substantial excess death tolls in Norway.

Aarstad found it curious that an academic speaking in affiliation with the Norwegian Institute of Public Health declared that the excess deaths had nothing to do with the Covid mRNA shots.

Citing a Nature Medicine paper Nafilyan et al. Aarstad would go on to analyze that paper and found that if the authors had extended the time horizon to several weeks they would have come to the opposite conclusion.

The professor’s analysis of this British data was finally accepted by a German journal called EXCLI Journal a gold open access journal listed in DOAJ, Web of Science, EBSCO, Pubmed, and PubmedCentral; and a backup of the data is kept on the server ELDORADO at Technical University Dortmund.

The Analyses of young people in England aged 12-29 revealed that deaths increased significantly in 10 of 11 weeks after COVID-19 vaccination compared to the first week (blue color in the figure where 95% confidence intervals indicate the probability within the given range).

In three of those weeks, the death rate was at least doubled.

The tendency was the same for each dose.

For example, the probability of death was 1.95 and 2.67 times higher four weeks after vaccination with the first and second doses and 2.67 higher six weeks after the third dose.

Explaining the findings of his research, Professor Aarstad notes:

“The findings deviate from a study by Nafilyan et al. claiming that COVID vaccination did not increase deaths among young people in England.

“By referring to it, Hanne Gulseth at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health has argued that, amid an above 50% excess mortality rate from diseases among young in Norway, ‘There is no evidence the covid vaccine has induced a generally increased mortality.’

“However, a limitation of Nafilyan et al.’s study is that they compared mortality in the first 12 weeks after vaccination with mortality after that.

“Not ruling out increased long-term mortality, i.e., after 12 weeks, it can have masked increased mortality also in the first 12 weeks, which I show.”

Covid vaccination, therefore, cause deaths to soar.

Aarstad continued, “As I find increased mortality after the first week despite this, therefore, indicates that the substantial mortality due to the vaccination is even higher.

Lastly, it is worth mentioning that Nafilyan et al. also found increased mortality from the 25th week after vaccination and forward, compared to the 24 first weeks.

This finding is particularly disturbing as it indicates that Covid injections among the young particularly appear to increase long-term mortality.

“Unfortunately, it may, along with my findings, explain increased mortality among young people in Norway,” the professor notes.

Aarstad warns that sudden deaths caused by the deployment of the countermeasure response across nations clearly demonstrates a disturbing signal, one that should raise alarm.

Professor Arstad explained that independent news outlets, such as THAIMBC News, along with credible authors on Substack such as John Campbell, are absolutely vital for more veracity on life and death topics.

With no political agenda, Aarstad doesn’t profoundly question vaccines generally and he remains cognizant of the importance of pharmaceutical breakthroughs in a modern society.

Yet the pragmatic Norwegian academic is nonetheless raising concerns about the mRNA injections and the measures imposed to supposedly tackle Covid during the pandemic.