Insurance Claims After Covid-19 Vaccination Rise by Almost 30% in Iceland Over Three Months
Around 311,000 Icelanders have received at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccines which means one in 6,760 have already applied for damages.
The Icelandic Health Insurance has now received 46 applications for damage payouts after Covid-19 vaccination. Most of the claims are still being processed. Three have already been approved and three have been declined. The mean age of the applicants whose applications have already been approved is 39 years.
Around 311,000 Icelanders have received at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccines, which means one in 6,760 have already made a claim.
To date, a total of 311 serious cases of adverse effects following Covid-19 vaccination had been reported to the Medicines Agency, or one in every 1,000 vaccinated. Thus, it appears that around 15% of those reporting serious adverse effects went on to claim compensation.
In 2021 and 2022 just over 6,000 cases of adverse effects after Covid-19 vaccination, serious or not, had been reported to the Medicines Agency. This is around one in every 52 persons vaccinated.
In 2019 the Medicines Agency received a total of nine reports of adverse effects after influenza vaccination, none of them serious. It may be assumed that around 70,000 people were vaccinated against the flu that year, which means approximately one in every 7,800 reported mild adverse effects and none reported severe effects.
Recently, data from large German insurer Techniker Krankenkasse showed one in every 23 persons insured had received payout due to adverse effects after vaccination, an elevenfold rise compared with previous years, corrected for the different scale of the Covid vaccination effort compared with earlier years. Around 76% of the German population have been fully vaccinated and assuming the same ratio for the 11 million insured by the Techniker Krankenkasse this amounts to one in every 17 vaccinated. It must be taken into account here that this includes all adverse effects, serious or not. The Icelandic numbers are well below this.
In May this year, 36 Icelanders had filed claims after Covid-19 vaccination. Considering the low rate of vaccination during the summer months an increase by 10 since then, a 27% increase, indicates a considerable lag; we may assume this number to keep rising over the next months, even years. It must also be kept in mind that the application process is no easy task and for an application to be accepted a hard proof of causal relationship must be provided.
The rate of one claim for every 6,760 people vaccinated is huge and extremely worrying. Compared with an expected rate of 1-2 cases cases of serious adverse effects in a million after influenza-vaccination, this amounts to a 75 to 150-fold that ratio and there is little doubt those numbers will keep rising. If we use a conservative estimate, based on the cases already evaluated (3 accepted, 3 declined) we still see a 33 to 75-fold increase against what may generally be expected after vaccination against influenza. Even if we only count the three claims already accepted, that amounts to about 10 in a million, 5-10 times the expected rate.
The next few years will be telling in terms of long term sequelae, esp if the true covidians keep jabbing up.
See Dr. Malone
Thank you for an excellent explanation.
Which, additionally, kind of challenges the "novelty" of whatever was publicly presented as "novel".
And, equally interestingly, shows from the timeline that yes, the work on this thing was done and quite intensely, before 2020. Contrary to the inncocent public appearances.
16
Reply
Collapse
Joy Potter
2 hr ago
Liked by Robert W Malone MD, MS
Oh my heavens Dr. Malone you are so dedicated… you leave me speechless. The only thing I can say is take two aspirins and call me in the morning, chuckle …oh no after reading your detailed extremely informative tome I need to take two aspirins and call my doctor in the morning, chuckle. Any lawyer would want you on their side! Whew….You’re brilliant.