WHO studies on lives “saved” by vaccination and Pfizer’s pivotal trial
Source: Dr Peter F. Mayer, TKP.at, 18 Aug 2024
The publication by some WHO employees on the lives allegedly saved by the vaccination campaign has already been the subject of scathing criticism. Not even the maths in the study is correct. If one takes data from the authorisation study, one arrives at a negative number of “saved” lives.
In the Methods section of the study published in the Lancet on 7 August 2024, we read about the data on which the study was based, including “vaccine effectiveness data from the literature“. I would like to contribute to making the results of the study even more reliable. This is probably best achieved by using the results of Pfizer’s only randomised, placebo-controlled (RCT) study.
In November 2020, the first press release stated that Pfizer and BioNTech’s mRNA gene technology had a relative efficacy of 95%. But as we know, the deaths that occurred in the vaccination group could not yet be counted at that time, as they had to be closely examined to see whether they were actually related to Covid. With the placebo group, it was of course easier and clearer and all deaths could be reported and analysed in the same way, as they could only be caused by Covid.
As previously reported, Pfizer published a new paper on 28 July 2021 as an update of the clinical trial of the then ongoing Phase III of its Covid vaccine. In the British Medical Journal, co-editor Professor Peter Doshi subjected the publication to a critical assessment. Well hidden in a supplement, Table S3 contained some serious side effects. It was reported that 15 of the approximately 22,000 people who received the vaccine in the trial had died, compared with 14 of the 22,000 people who received a placebo.

According to Pfizer, these were not just Covid deaths. In fact, most of them would not have been due to Covid. Only three of the study participants died from Covid-related illnesses – one who received the vaccine and two in the control group. The other deaths were due to other diseases, with 6 deaths due to cardiovascular disease in the vaccinated group compared to 2 in the unvaccinated group. And this has now been clearly recognised and proven as a vaccination side effect.
On 8 November 2021, the FDA published the “Summary Basis for Regulatory Action“, a 30-page memo explaining why it granted full approval for the BioNTech vaccine on 23 August, but it was never used in the USA. Yet it is apparently the same study that is referred to.
On page 23 of the report there is this intriguing sentence:
“From dose 1 to the cut-off date of 13 March 2021, there were a total of 38 deaths, 21 in the COMIRNATY [vaccine] group and 17 in the placebo group.”
This would give the WHO staff a solid basis from an RCT study when calculating the “lives saved”. Regardless of which figures are used, the result would be a considerable negative sum of “saved” lives. Perhaps it would even be possible to replicate the data from Denis Rancourt et al, who demonstrated an excess mortality of 17 million people caused by the vaccination campaign.
One could also take the data from a Danish study from 8 March 2021, which, however, found little resonance in the mainstream media. This is because, as reported, a table shows the SARS-Cov-2 infections in vaccinated people compared to a control group:

From 0 to 14 days after the first dose, however, the risk of Covid-19 infection was significantly higher among those vaccinated:
- According to the study, among the 30,000 residents of the care homes, vaccinated people had a 40% higher risk of SARS CoV-2 infection than unvaccinated people.
- Among the 330,000 healthcare professionals, the newly vaccinated even had a 104% higher risk of infection.
It is known that vaccinated persons were only counted as vaccinated after 14 days from the first dose and a further 7 days after the second dose, before that they were counted as unvaccinated. Deaths within these periods were therefore counted among the unvaccinated.
These are the methods, besides mathematical voodoo, used to arrive at lives “saved” by vaccination.