Excess Deaths in the United Kingdom: Midazolam and Euthanasia in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Midazolam se menda daje ob ventilaciji pacientov.
Conclusion
The extraordinary spike in UK excess deaths in April 2020 was not
due to the SARS-CoV-2 virus, because there were relatively few
infections and there was no “high consequence infectious disease”,
as ocially declared in March 2020.
The UK COVID-19 pandemic was iatrogenic, created with
widespread and persistent use of Midazolam injections in all
regions of England, particularly in care homes, under a systemic
policy of euthanasia. The nature of the euthanasia needs further
investigation.
Statistically, Midazolam injections were highly correlated with UK
excess deaths throughout the pandemic, overwhelming COVID-19
disease or vaccination as other possible explanations for excess
mortality.
Midazolam was the common proximal cause of excess deaths in
the pandemic, but there were likely many other primary causes
including comorbidities, infections and vaccination. The data
available are not sucient to measure the precise impact of
vaccination on excess deaths.
Vaccination was unlikely to have saved many, if any, lives
because the unreliable early data grossly exaggerated COVID
deaths, inating the extent of the SARS-CoV-2 threat which was
subsequently assumed and projected in computer models which
created illusory benets.
Most global investigations of COVID-19 epidemiology, only
based on the relative impacts of COVID disease and vaccination,
are probably inaccurate, because their assumptions are generally
false due to the signicant presence of confounding factors in
some countries, such as the UK.
Propofol (P) and midazolam (M) are frequently given by continuous infusion for sedation in critically ill, mechanically ventilated patients. We compared these drugs with regard to: (1) time-to-awaken; (2) reproducibility of bedside assessments of level of sedation; (3) time-to-sedation; and (4)...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Propofol (P) and midazolam (M) are frequently given by continuous infusion for sedation in critically ill, mechanically ventilated patients.