Denis Rancourt, PhD, has written over 100 papers and has held post-doctoral research positions at prestigious institutions in France and The Netherlands, before being a physics professor and lead scientist at the University of Ottawa for 23 years.
On September 17, the non-profit, CORRELATION, published a report, co-authored by Rancourt, entitled ‘COVID-19 vaccine-associated mortality in the Southern Hemisphere.’
The paper is based on the data from 17 countries in the Southern Hemisphere and equatorial region. The researchers found a causal link between many peaks in all-cause mortality and vaccine rollouts. The authors were able to quantify the fatal toxicity risk per injection, which dramatically increased for the elderly.
Furthermore, the authors stated in their paper:
‘We quantify the overall all-ages vDFR [vaccine dose fatality rate] for the 17 countries to be (0.126 ± 0.004) %, which would imply 17.0 ± 0.5 million COVID-19 vaccine deaths worldwide, from 13.50 billion injections up to 2 September 2023. This would correspond to a mass iatrogenic event that killed (0.213 ± 0.006) % of the world population (1 death per 470 living persons, in less than 3 years), and did not measurably prevent any deaths.’
"Every additional 4-5 years in age, the risk of dying per [COVID-19] injection doubles"