Dysfunction much? Fed staff budget of $9.5 million to oversee (maximum) pay-outs of $5 million for “vaccine” injuries for 31 million uninsured Americans
Interesting article from Children’s Health Defense.
Here is the kicker:
“..the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) budget for COVID- 19 vaccine injury compensation will increase in fiscal year 2023 — from approximately $1 million to $5 million — and its budget for staffing and contractors will jump from $5 million to $9.5 million.”
Enquiring minds might want to know whether dropping the costs of staff and contractors to $1.5 million, whilst increasing the compensation for the vaxx injured to $13 million might be a better way to go.
But hey, let’s put that in the context of the numbers of vaxx injured in the more than two years since the launch of the first of the lethal injections (yep, we have now had more than two years since the launch.
I can’t find any celebrations for that milestone with its associated 666 million doses administered in the US (ok 660 million but close enough to the devil’s number).
Let’s see how far the $5 million in compensation for Fiscal Year ended 30 September 2023 will go. I guess this is compensation for the 31 million uninsured Americans, as Insurance companies seem to have no compunction in destroying their owners capital by coughing up for the poisoning of the insured. (I am glad I am not a shareholder in an Insurance company!).
Let’s just look at how much hospitalizations might have cost by looking at “raw” VAERS data – remember this data is under-reported by around 40 events not reported for every one actually reported.
VAERS Summary for COVID-19 Vaccines through 12/9/2022 – VAERS Analysis
Scoot to the two right hand columns that details reports from the US from C19 mRNA injections.
Here you will see there a little shy of 910,000 reports of adverse events. Scoot down the table to “Number of Hospitalizations” of 72,699 and the “# of Emergency Room/Department Visits” of 108,168.
We won’t adjust by the under-reporting factor of 40, to get to 2.9 million likely ACTUAL hospitalizations or more than 4.3 million likely ACTUAL emergency room visits. Let’s just sick to the VAERS “raw” numbers.
Let’s use $12,000 bucks as a proxy for the cost of an overnight hospital stay and let’s assume an average of a 3 day stay from just the 72,699 hospitalizations.
What is the average hospital stay cost per day? – Heimduo
“The average insured overnight hospital stay costs about $11,700. But, this price tag varies significantly by type of insurance coverage (and if you have insurance coverage at all).”
Of course, hospitals received bounties for classifying hospital visits as “complex/C19” during the pandemic.
Criminal Prosecutions begin for Remdesivir treatments causing death (substack.com)
“Hospitalized as a complex non-CoVID-19 patient average charge = $111,000
Hospitalized and treated as a complex CoVID-19 patient (intubation/ICU) average charge = $450,000”
Are the vaxx injured billed as a “complex non-CoVID-19 patient”? Probably. So, $111,000 bcks per patient. This makes the arithmetic below somewhat understated – multiplying the $2.6 billion by ten would be closer to the mark.
The cost over the two years of the C19 mRNA injections that resulted in hospitalizations = $12,000 a night x 3 nights x 72,699 hospitalizations = drum roll TWO BILLION SIX HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN MILLION DOLLARS.
A few extrapolations for sh!t and giggles.
That cost of $2.6 billion leaps to over $100 billion bucks if you apply the under-reporting factor of 40 to catch a truer rate of hospitalizations across the US over the last two years. The number leaps by a further factor of ten if you apply the rates for non-C19 complex patient care.
Now we are talking real money and a massive transfer from the “activity producing” component of annual US GDP of around $26 trillion and into the unproductive and sick component of GDP caused by the injections.
You might drop these numbers by a third if you want to reduce the emergency stay to two nights, or you might increase the number to 5 or 15 nights – especially if the patient arrived in a serious condition. Plug in your own estimates for the variables.
How does that compare to the $5 million in compensations available, presumably, to the 31 million uninsured?
Ok, lets say that the uninsured represent 10% of the American population and that the 2.6 billion bucks at the total level equates to 260 million bucks for the uninsured.
We are still left with the uninsured receiving less than 2% of the costs of hospitalization.
Now factor in that hospitalization costs represent only one of the adverse events that will required on-going treatment, both for the insured and uninsured.
Insurance companies either stop paying out for the negligent poisoning of their customers or insurance companies go bankrupt.
Federal, state, city and local governments watch as their uninsured voters descend into ever increasing health poverty and death.
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