For our Blast from the Past this week, we propose that our readers take a new look at the history and evolution of the groundbreaking “Skidmore Survey” on Covid-19—both the illness and side effects from the “vaccines.”
The online survey, conducted by Dr. Mark Skidmore in December 2021, processed the responses of some 3,000 individuals representative of the general U.S. population. The survey asked respondents to describe their own experiences with Covid-19 illness and injections, as well as the impact on people they know.
When asked about adverse events from the Covid-19 injections—those that respondents had personally experienced as well as adverse events experienced by the person closest to them in their social circle—one in six respondents had experienced their own health issues after receiving the shots, and about 25% reported knowing of others who had experienced significant adverse events or death following the injections.
How Many People Died from the Covid-19 Inoculations?
Dr. Skidmore spent a whole year trying to get the survey and its results published in a peer-reviewed journal. When BMC Infectious Diseases finally published it in January 2023, it quickly became the most downloaded article in the journal’s history.*
Here, Dr. Brian Hooker, chief scientist of Children’s Health Defense, and Dr. Mark Skidmore discuss the scientific significance of the survey, its publication, and its impact.
Doctors & Scientists with Brian Hooker, PhD – Guest: Dr. Mark Skidmore, PhD: Covid Vaccine Decisions
This survey is a significant contribution. You will want to know about it. Pass it on.
Related:
How Many People Died from the Covid-19 Inoculations? – Lighthouse Economics, February 15, 2022
The Covid-19 Survey with Dr. Mark Skidmore – Solari Report, February 24, 2022
Critical Survey on Deaths & Injuries from Covid-19 Jabs by Professor Mark Skidmore – Corey’s Digs, March 1, 2022
Doctors and Scientists with Brian Hooker, Ph.D. – Covid Vaccine Decisions – Episode 10 (2023) on CHD.TV
* Footnote:
From the article metrics of access and citations as well as online attention, updated March 16th, 2023:
“This article is in the 99th percentile (ranked 20th) of the 403,644 tracked articles of a similar age in all journals and the 99th percentile (ranked 1st) of the 140 tracked articles of a similar age in BMC Infectious Diseases.”
Altmetric.com also shows an incredible 16 million user impact on Twitter and counts it “In the top 5% of all research outputs scored by Altmetric.”