I am specifically referring to the actual manufacturing factories. Pfizer, Moderna, J&J, AZ - they are mere marketing arms. None of them did ANY manufacturing. All Manufacturing was outsourced to more than a dozen of different factories/sub-contractors.
The comment I wrote, was in reference to this paper:
Which only contains Danish Medical Agency (DKMA) Serious Adverse Events data, so only for Denmark. As per DKMA data, the Pfizer BNT162b2 shots used in Denmark came from only few EU based factories manufacturing for Pfizer.
The earlier data you refer to, is an independent study is by Craig Paardekooper, and it was done purely on the US VAERS data, so only for the BNT162b2 batches manufacture in the US (and this does NOT included the DMED data, as military got their own specific Pfizer batches). This came out in October 2021, not "a few years ago".
And the above paper is the first published, peer-review data on the subject.
The Danish paper clearly demonstrates (with enough statistical power) that the deadly batches were not small (in medical production variation, 4.2% is not small, it's huge). 0.05% would have been small.
Which three companies?
I am specifically referring to the actual manufacturing factories. Pfizer, Moderna, J&J, AZ - they are mere marketing arms. None of them did ANY manufacturing. All Manufacturing was outsourced to more than a dozen of different factories/sub-contractors.
The comment I wrote, was in reference to this paper:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/eci.13998
Which only contains Danish Medical Agency (DKMA) Serious Adverse Events data, so only for Denmark. As per DKMA data, the Pfizer BNT162b2 shots used in Denmark came from only few EU based factories manufacturing for Pfizer.
The earlier data you refer to, is an independent study is by Craig Paardekooper, and it was done purely on the US VAERS data, so only for the BNT162b2 batches manufacture in the US (and this does NOT included the DMED data, as military got their own specific Pfizer batches). This came out in October 2021, not "a few years ago".
And the above paper is the first published, peer-review data on the subject.
The Danish paper clearly demonstrates (with enough statistical power) that the deadly batches were not small (in medical production variation, 4.2% is not small, it's huge). 0.05% would have been small.
Perhaps you mean something else?