Quote:
Originally Posted by jfrog
But they don't do full autopsies on most covid deaths. They don't do full autopsies on most deaths in the country. It's a very small fraction that have an autopsy performed. So I still have no idea why a 6 week delay on less than 1% of the deaths would have a meaningful impact on the numbers.
I mean most people from death to burial isn't even a full week apart...
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Quantity of autopsies or timeframe from death to burial isn't relevant here. Cause of death signed to certificates of death being nCOVID19 without autopsy means the actual cause of death remains uninvestigated, and therefore, guessed at.
You bring this out when you mention comorbidity. Was it kidney failure or nCOVID19? When comorbidity isn't studied and analyzed through autopsy, and only one cause of death, that being nCOVID19 is given, the statistics are automatically and immediately skewed and therefore unreliable.