Dr. Robert Jackson has been a physician for 35 years. In his practice, there are more than 5,000 patients, about 3,000 of whom got vaccinated with COVID-19 vaccines.
What makes him unusual is that he is not afraid to speak out about what he is seeing in his patients. This is because he’s too valuable to fire.
Jackson said never in his career has he seen anything like what he’s seeing now: 40 percent of his vaccinated patients reported a vaccine injury, and 5 percent are still injured.
Also, he’s had 12 patients die following the jab. Normally in his patient base, he’ll see one or two deaths a year.
So if there is a question of whether all-cause mortality goes up or down after the jabs rolled out, his numbers make it crystal clear.
This is aggregated data from dozens of doctors in his practice: a .33 percent excess mortality rate among his patients after the vaccines rolled out (i.e., the vaccines likely killed 1 in 300 people in his patient base).
However, this is likely an undercount because he’s not the primary care physician.
However, these are deaths in rheumatology patients, so this may account for the higher estimate. But we are in the same ballpark as the death estimate from VAERS.
Of course, there COULD be an “unknown” thing that killed all these people. It would have to be massive and injected into all these patients to cause the symptoms observed. Wonder what else fits that description? Nobody will tell us.
Naturally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) doesn’t want you to know any of this and they would prefer it if you didn’t watch the video.
[embed]https://rumble.com/embed/v10g98k/?pub=4[/embed]
Here is a comment made on my Substack page from A Midwestern Doctor:
There are five important points to consider with this video, some of which may not be evident to people who do not work in this field:- Doctors tend to be very bad at catching adverse reactions. (I’m presently working on an article explaining some of the key reasons for this).
- Rheumatology patients are more susceptible to having reactions to the vaccine than the general population.
However, these patients were excluded from the initial vaccine trials. People at risk of negative effects are rarely studied in clinical trials the companies don’t want to increase the adverse event rates.
- Jackson is a consultant, not a primary care physician, so he is most likely going to miss or not hear about most of the deaths that occur.
- There is an extreme shortage/demand for rheumatologists in the midwest.
- Antiphospholipid syndrome, a condition in which the immune system mistakenly creates antibodies that attack tissues in the body, is a common cause of blood clotting in patients with autoimmune disorders.
I have had a few patients with COVID-19 for whom treatment with exosomes that exosomes were tremendously helpful for, but since they are costly, I’ve used them only on extremely ill people who tried home treatment and who I expected to be hospitalized and then die.
One of my colleagues has treated a larger number of very ill patients pre-hospitalization and had the same result, along with many post-hospitalization who had long-haul COVID-19 who had immediate recoveries.