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The Trends Journal has long been reporting protocols whereby doctors list COVID-19 as the cause of death even in those cases where the patient had not been tested, and it was just “assumed” the patient had been infected.
On 14 April, we reported, “Dr. Scott Jenson, a Minnesota state senator who is also a medical doctor, accused the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of directing doctors to list COVID-19 as a cause of death even for someone who was never tested for it, which he said is ‘ridiculous’ and misleading.”
Dr. Jensen added, “I know that I’ve talked with nursing staff… and led to believe that there may have been a COVID-19 diagnosis included on the death certificate document without having had a COVID-19 confirmed laboratory test.”
Note: For his truth-telling efforts, Dr. Jenson was investigated by the Minnesota Board of Medical Practice for spreading false information. On 28 July, Dr. Jensen announced the charges had been dismissed.
In May, the Trends Journal wrote about the controversy in Belgium, a relatively small country with a modern health care system, which was reporting the highest death rate from the virus in the world.
That made no sense. It turned out they listed COVID-19 as the official cause of death for every person dying in a nursing home, whether or not they had even been tested.
Earlier this month, the Trends Journal reported CDC data showing that some 94 percent of those dying from COVID-19 had at least one additional, significant pre-existing health condition and, more often, more than one. These other health issues were primarily heart disease, diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure, and adult respiratory distress syndrome.