UK sunshine law reveals 2021 spike in cardiac events
In young people, emergency calls for cardiac illness nearly doubled from 2020 to 2021
By Tatiana Prophet
Well it turns out that the United Kingdom has a Freedom of Information Act, passed by parliament in 2000, and it is also called the “Freedom of Information Act.”
Thanks to this law, we were able to find out a devastating new statistic from the National Health Service. Between 2020 and 2021, in the second most populous county in England, the average monthly number of cardiac emergency calls nearly doubled in patients under 30 years of age.
The startling numbers came from the National Health Service’s West Midlands Ambulance Service in response to a Freedom of Information request by a reporter with The Exposé, Duncan Husband. (The main city in West Midlands county is Birmingham.)
The sharp rise for 2021 appears to undercut suggestions by government/media (Dr Sanjay Gupta comes to mind) that Covid-19 disease causes myocarditis on a par anywhere near what the world has seen after receiving the experimental immune therapy rolled out at the end of 2020.
Read the article here. The link also contains the number of myocarditis cases reported to VAERS during the same time period, which also shows an unprecedented spike. VAERS is the CDC’s voluntary reporting system for adverse events related to immunizations. They can be entered by physicians and members of the public. Causation is not determined by the CDC.
Husband has made other requests related to the pandemic and response, which we will release as we are able to verify them.