July 2023 report from HRSA for COVID-19 jab injuries
UK, Canada and Taiwan compensating at a higher rate that the US.
Another report issued by HRSA showing the incompetence of our own government for those who were injured by a declared COVID-19 countermeasure.
No new compensated cases. Not a one. Bastards!!
Total COVID-19 CICP claims filed as of July 1, 2023: 11,897
Decisions: 1,011. Denied 983. Of those claims that were denied, 53% (518) missed the filing deadline of 1 year from the date of administration of countermeasure. Since the petitioner did not receive any notice of the CounterMeasures Injury Compensation Program (CICP) when receiving the countermeasure, how can we expect them to figure out the filing process of a program that is not promoted by our own government, hospitals, clinics or doctors?
10,886 pending review. Calculating the rate of reviewing cases and those who will be deemed compensable, the wait is projected to be over 7 years.
Found eligible for compensation: 28. That is misleading. It is really reimbursed for medical expenses.
Of the 28 claims found eligible for “compensation”, 4 were sent notices and a check for their unreimbursed medical expenses, 1 was compensable but had no medical expenses to reimburse, and 20 are still pending benefits determination.
What benefit? There is no benefit. Unlike other countries that actually pay some form of pain & suffering. Canada, UK and Singapore just to name a few countries.
CANADA
Speaking of Canada, the Vaccine Injury Support Program released statistics of claims from the start of the program, June 1, 2021 until June 1, 2023. Two years into the program.
1,859 claims received, 240 claims dismissed, 467 claims that have been assessed by the Medical Review Board. The good news in Canada if one wants to call it is 103 claims have been approved vs 28 in the US.
The approved figure of 103 represents over $6,695,716.00 Canadian dollars. That works out to an average payout of $65,007.00 for each successful claim.
Hardly anything to write home about, but well above the $1,718.00 average for the 5 compensable claims in the CICP.
UNITED KINGDOM
The NHS Business Authority administers the vaccine injury compensation scheme in the UK. To be eligible for compensation, a person must be severely injured from an approved vaccine. NHS provides a “one-off, tax-free payment of £120,000 to successful applicants where, on very rare occasions, a vaccine has caused severe disablement”.
The UK government is set to pay out over £11.5 million in Covid-19 vaccine damages to nearly 100 claimants, according to official data released by the NHS Business Services Authority.
As of June 13, 2023, 72 people have received payment from the UK government with another 24 scheduled to receive payment soon.
The authority has paid out just over £8.6 million, with a further £2.9m approved to pay. Overall, 1,614 claims were rejected out of the 5,708 received, while 109 did not meet the service’s criteria for medical assessment. 3,889 claims are pending review or approval.
Of the claims paid, the majority consist of:
Vaccine-induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis/cerebral venous sinus thrombosis
Guillain-Barré syndrome
Death as a result of the vaccine has been determined in less than 10 claims.
SINGAPORE
In the nation of Singapore, the Ministry of Health administers the Vaccine Injury Financial Assistance Program for COVID-19 Vaccination (VIFAP). The COVID-19 vaccine was provided free of charge to all citizens and long term residents and the vaccine was voluntary. No mandates.
To qualify for the VIFAP, individuals must be a Singapore Citizen, Permanent Resident or long-term pass holder who has received the COVID-19 vaccination under the NVP, and experienced a serious side effect that required inpatient hospitalisation, or caused permanent severe disability, or was fatal. The serious side effect must be assessed by a doctor to be related to the individual’s COVID-19 vaccination.
Singapore’s Ministry of Health defines serious side effect as, “A serious side effect is one that required inpatient hospitalization, or caused permanent severe disability, or was fatal.”
Payouts in Singapore dollars are established as follows:
Death or permanent serious injury $ 225,000 or $ 170,000 US
Hospitalization with ICU and recovery $ 10,000 or $ 7,600 US
Inpatient hospitalization with recovery $ 2,000 or $ 1,500 US
As of January 1, 2023, a total of 413 people have received payments from the VIFAP totaling $ 1,895,000 or $ 1,435,000 US. 3 people have received the top tier payment of $ 225,000 including a 16 year old weight lifter who suffered a cardiac arrest and was treated in ICU for a considerable time.
Last week I reached out to Singapore’s Ministry of Health media office for comment and updated data. No response.
Keep learning, keep challenging yourself and always, always question authority.
Philippines compensation payable for either death or medical reimbursable expenses is capped at PHP100,000. The value of a life lost is a mere USD1,832.23 (at today's exchange rate). I can assure that PHP100,000 will not cover very much of medical bills. Critical ICU care could well exceed PHP100,000 within a day or two.
Consider that a regular doctor will charge PHP500 - 1000 for a single consultation (before medication, tests, or treatment). A specialist will charge anywhere from 1,000 to 5,000 for a consultation only.
The victim must prove harm and jump through multiple hoops to get any assistance at all.
When I last checked via FOI (last year), there were 28 cases acknowledged for payment but with no details provided. I should make another request for update!
Put this in the context of more than 112,000 reports of injuries and 2,826 reports of deaths in the (grossly under reported) Philippines FDA pharmacovigilance system!
Injured Filipinos have truly been abandoned!