Call Volume for Paramedics Went Down in 2020, Up in 2021-2022
"The cause of this increase is not yet clear"
It is with increasing concern that I have been watching the emergence of disturbing data around the world with respect to all-cause mortality. Total deaths did not seem to be impacted much in 2020, which is when the “deadly” SARS-CoV-2 ripped through the naïve global population. This has raised questions about how deaths were attributed to COVID-19. We now know that this was over-estimated for multiple reasons, including misdiagnoses of COVID-19 due to a failure to follow proper clinical diagnostic procedures. Another major problem was attributing large proportions of deaths to COVID-19 when, in fact, they were deaths due to other clinical issues, but with a concomitant positive PCR test result. Due to the prevalence of non-transparent data, we don’t really have a good grasp on how deadly COVID-19 was in 2020.
However, all-cause mortality has undoubtedly spiked in many countries following the rollout of the “safe and effective” COVID-19 ‘vaccines’. This has been very odd, since one would expect a deadly outbreak followed by the introduction of an incredibly effective solution to do the opposite; bring a massive spike in deaths back down to baseline. But, that is not what the data are telling us. This does not definitively prove a cause-and-effect relationship between the rollout of the COVID-19 shots and the sharp rise in all-cause deaths. But, it does make open and honest discussions of the possibility an absolute necessity for anyone who is truly interested in public health.
So, from this perspective, I was intrigued by a heading on the front page of a local newspaper called the “Wellington Advertiser”, which serves Wellington county in the province of Ontario in the country of Canada. Here is the headline from today’s paper (March 3, 2023)…
I was more curious about the higher volume of calls, than the longer response times (which are primarily due to longer times waiting in hospitals for the turnover in care to occur).
Here are key quotes:
"The number of calls for paramedics [for Guelph and Wellington County] increased to 30,204 last year [2022], according to paramedic service data."
"The data averages out to around 82 calls per day service-wide, and an increase of 8% over the total number of calls recorded in 2021."
"Call volume decreased in 2020 as fewer people accessed emergency departments during the COVID-19 pandemic."
This doesn't seem to align with previous public messaging, does it ?!?
"Dewar also touched on last year's call trends, with data suggesting a 43% increase in calls for patients under the age of 18 when compared to 2021 call data."
(This correlates with the later rollout of COVID-19 'vaccines' to youth.)
"The most common medical complaints across all ages noted by Dewar were for respiratory illness (1,091 patients), cardiac-related chest pain (712 patients), and drug overdoses (510 patients)."
"We are looking at the calls, as are our peers in other services who have seen similar increases."
""The cause (or causes) of this increase is not yet clear," Dewar told the newspaper."
Notably, this increase correlates with increases in all-cause mortality around the world. Would it be worth considering the ‘elephant in the room’; i.e., the possibility that the COVID-19 shots might have a role to play here? Any experts who definitively say '“no” better have some solid data to prove it.
It would be great if we could get paramedic service data from all across Canada and other countries. Specifically, it would be helpful to know what call volumes looked like in 2020 (no shots but a ‘deadly virus that overwhelmed the medical system’), 2021 and 2022 ('COVID-19 ‘vaccine’ rollout), and pre-pandemic (baseline).
Maybe Freedom of Information requests would be a way to access these ???
If anyone has access to these data, please point me and others to them in the comments.
I’m reading your Substack in an emergency room that is totally overcrowded. Beds line the hallways. No rooms available in the hospital, to admit patients. This is the same situation in every hospital in my metro area. No mention of overwhelmed hospitals in the media. Something is quite wrong.
Cause of excess deaths and increased paramedic calls is a total mystery, according to the media and medical establishment. Forget about the emperor having no clothes! This is like a stadium full of naked people all pretending to admire each others' clothing. These last 3+ years will go down in history as being far worse than the Dark Ages.