Hugely Influential Covid Vaccine Study Claiming the Jabs Saved Millions of Lives Torn to Shreds in Medical Journal

The hugely influential study on COVID-19 vaccines, Watson et al., which was used by experts throughout the pandemic to show that the jabs saved tens of millions of lives in one year, has been thoroughly debunked, by yours truly (a misinformation researcher now primarily focused on COVID-19, not least because of being fired for refusing the jab and winning subsequent legal cases), with the critique finally published in a peer-reviewed medical journal. This is the first of a three-part metacritique of six influential studies on the COVID-19 vaccines, with similar problems identified throughout. The same criticisms would apply to many more studies.

  • I start by noting that this study (and these studies in general) have received very little scrutiny. One wonders why the Universe left this vitally important task to me, a sole former pharmacist and misinformation researcher/philosopher who was more interested in issues like the meaning of existence, with no funding, and struggling at life since being (and continuing to be) persecuted for refusing the jab. Perhaps understandable if you consider who is paying most of the medical researchers out there (and we will get to that), but still baffling when considering the amount of talent on ‘our contrarian side’, the side filled with experts who bucked the trend on the pandemic and pretty much got everything right. A little serendipity involved, too, as I partly did this because US Senator Ron Johnson pretty much asked me to.
  • On to the study. Firstly, Watson et al. “revolves around a model which, by definition, is not truly representative of reality”. Remember, people, the map is not the territory. And models are beholden to the GIGO principle: garbage in, garbage out. And when it comes to these studies like Watson et al., there’s a lot of garbage to sift through.
  • Then I note that their vaccine efficacy/effectiveness estimates are dodgy, bringing in ‘JECP4’, the published research I did alongside BMJ senior editor (and one of my intellectual heroes) Peter Doshi. They have been exaggerating efficacy/effectiveness (and safety) in a really big way by doing things like ignoring incidents in the ‘partially vaccinated’, or even counting them as happening in the ‘unvaccinated’. Collectively, Doshi’s team and I mathematically demonstrated: “Such methodology can make a completely ineffective vaccine appear 48% effective, or even around 65% effective, if cases in the ‘partially vaccinated’ are ascribed to the ‘unvaccinated’. In fact, even a negatively effective vaccine can, in this way, be made to appear moderately effective.”
  • It is unclear how the authors “determined the effectiveness of the vaccines in preventing death”. If they “utilised the original clinical trials of the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, along with recently published reanalyses, they would have noted no statistically significant decrease in COVID-19 deaths among the vaccinated groups, a statistically significant increase in serious adverse events of special interest, and a non-statistically significant increase in total deaths”.
  • Another big problem is static vaccine effectiveness estimates, with the researchers assuming that the vaccine happily continues being as effective as ever, for ‘simplicity’, which we now know is complete nonsense. They’re literally spruiking boosters every few months! Remember the GIGO principle. Opt for nice things like ‘simplicity’ in your models, and this is the trash you will get in return.
  • I note that not only do the jabs become ineffective really quickly they even seem to become negatively effective – yeah you heard me, apparently increasing your chance of COVID-19 infection, and even death.
  • They also made big assumptions on infection fatality rates (IFRs). They didn’t even bother to justify (or even perhaps disclose) their preferred figures. If you’re exaggerating COVID-19 deaths, and they do, as they all do, you’re eventually going to be exaggerating the benefits of the jabs. A super important study came out just as this critique was in publishing. Looks like they’ve been (at least) doubling Covid-deaths since Omicron, the old with/from Covid debate.
  • Did the benefits outweigh the risks? Surprisingly, from this hugely influential study, you’d never know. They don’t seem to care about “the deaths and injuries caused by the vaccines”. What’s the point of saving 14 million lives if you’ve killed, say, 28 million? Bit of a missed opportunity, don’t you think? It does appear the jabs do injure and kill people, which was obvious even from the beginning, from their own clinical trials. Perhaps there were more in the Pfizer trial, with (published) questions over potentially fraudulent activity. Later studies show way more side effects, and I’ve argued in a BMJ journal that the myocarditis risk alone outweighs the ‘benefits’ of the jab in young healthy people.
  • They also did things like using ‘estimates’ of all-cause excess mortality because they didn’t actually have the data. And note the assumption that excess mortality is all due to COVID-19, rather than, oh I don’t know… the jabs. They don’t even acknowledge the possibility, even though we know for a fact that the vaccines have killed people – what we can dispute is the number.
  • With unjustified figures, made-up data, omitted data (e.g. China, which has a huge chunk of the world’s population), and even data collected from non-academic sources (like an economics magazine!), the authors actually admit to “wide uncertainty”. Somehow that wasn’t expressed when all the experts, politicians and newsreaders were proclaiming the study’s earth-shattering conclusions.
  • Funnily enough, their own charts “reveal that deaths were already declining before widespread vaccination (January–February 2021), only to rise again after significant vaccine uptake (August 2021)”. While we’re on excess mortality, a few researchers have noted that this is occurring even though the pandemic is over, and some (hi there) have even noted a correlation with the COVID-19 vaccines. (I have another excess deaths article coming out later that definitively shows it isn’t COVID-19, it isn’t the lockdowns, it’s the jab. Just waiting on publishing.)
  • Finally, we move on to financial and political conflicts of interest. Read every word of this bit. The study’s authors have financial links to vaccine manufacturers, the WHO, the Wellcome Trust, and our old friend, the one expert we all had to see as an expert despite him not having a single earned academic degree, Bill Gates. Politically, the boss of the research team is none other than Neil Ferguson, ‘Professor Lockdown’, also known as the moron that was wrong about everything, and who “was caught violating the very lockdown measures he had advocated by having an affair with a married woman during the restrictions”. Not a righteous dude. This is going to be a theme in this three-part series. The people behind the research on the jabs tend to be funded by the manufacturers and governments that approved, encouraged and even mandated the vaccines. I even go a little further, explaining that Big Pharma, the mainstream media and just about everything else is effectively owned or controlled by a handful of very rich people.
  • I also summarise some of the research demonstrating that “the pharmaceutical industry funds and arguably influences major medical journals that publish favourable studies by these same scientists, as well as the peer reviewers for these journals — just as it sponsors clinical trials of its own products, which predictably yield results more favourable to its interests compared with independent studies”. Oh, and don’t forget that it funds its own regulators. What fun!
  • I end with the customary recommendations: “To accurately assess the number of lives truly saved by these vaccines, Watson et al. and others should repeat their analysis using more rigorous and transparent methods: incorporating conservative estimates of vaccine effectiveness, given recent concerns about counting-window methodologies; accounting for rapidly waning and potentially negative effectiveness; using accurate, clearly disclosed IFRs and CFRs; giving preference to available evidence over speculative estimates; and ideally, conducting the research independently, without financial ties to vaccine manufacturers, their shareholders, or organisations that promote and mandate these vaccines.”

Well, there you have it. Maker sure you, um, Trust the Science, and all that. Especially when that dodgy science spreads everywhere in a heartbeat and takes a good three years to be debunked. Somehow I don’t think this takedown will be featuring in the big journals and the nightly news – they’ve already said ‘no’.

Dr Raphael Lataster is an Associate Lecturer at the University of Sydney, specialised in misinformation, and a former pharmacist. This article was first published in his Substack newsletter, Okay Then NewsRead more on his research and legal actions, including his recent win against the healthcare vaccine mandate in New South Wales.

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transmissionofflame
11 months ago

I would have thought a good place to start would be age banded all cause mortality comparison between “vaccinated” (including the just-“vaccinated” which were often lumped in with the “unvaccinated”) and the “unvaccinated“, controlling for existing health conditions. Any assessment based on “covid deaths” cannot be taken seriously and in any case if the “vaccine” saves you from “covid” but kills you some other way then it can hardly be considered “safe and effective”.

EppingBlogger
11 months ago

If it is thoght that the time after vaccination makes a difference then why make data binary (vacc, non-vacc). It sould do regression on vaccinated and when against not at all.

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

A lot of people “died of Covid” shortly after being “vaccinated” and they were counted as unvaccinated. I wonder if the same approach would have been taken had the figures been different.

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Also should look at how many jabs people have had, to see if there are long term safety danger signals.

robnicholson
robnicholson
11 months ago

Mentioned in the article that the effectiveness went negative very quickly. That showed up on the ONS data very soon after the vaccination programmed started. The ONS stopped publishing the data when it got embarrassing. Sorry, when free testing kits stopped so the data was unreliable… But also it’s now shown that more jabs = more COVID. When I mention this to friends they look at me like I’ve gone mad. No number of charts is going to convince them otherwise. Just yesterday, I was sat with some neighbours. One of them mentioned their son-in-law has been diagnosed with stage 4 brain cancer in his early 50s. They all agreed that cancer seems to be getting a lot worse, esp. going straight to stage 4. Now the confounder is we’re all getting older but when I said “I wonder what we’ve injected into ourselves in the last five years that could be causing this?” I can almost see the cog turning but they still won’t even entertain the idea that it’s something we’ve done. Of course, I’m not equally going to state “It’s the vax” without a lot more evidence both ways but super sceptical that pharma or government will… Read more »

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  robnicholson

I have been reluctant to say much to anyone I know about the “vaccines” because I don’t want to worry people – though if anyone asked me for advice on boosters I would be more forthcoming. But nobody I know that I discuss things with is getting boosters. For the others, any damage is already done.
If anyone mentions it I would certainly say that it was rushed out, the trials were sketchy and the “disease” did not merit what happened, and that mandating it is terribly wrong.

robnicholson
robnicholson
11 months ago

A sensible stance and summary. Yes, I tend not to mention it anymore with my peer group (50s) unless prompted. I know who amongst them has woken up and a couple have even apologised for been so nasty. As to how many are still taking the boosters in that group, I really don’t know. I suspect more than I hope. Those who haven’t are often vocal. I assume the rest are still lining up.

I lead short walks occasionally for the local charity. These are mid-week so primarily the retired. I was listening into 4 of them discussing the recent jab which they’d obviously taken because they ALL had side effects ranging from “Very sore arm for nearly a week” to “I was ill for two weeks”.

I just bite my tongue but that’s also wrong. Horrible time in our history.

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  robnicholson

I would struggle to bite my tongue. Most of the younger people I know took it for travel etc and anyway are not eligible for boosters. The older people I know never mention it, suspect they have not bothered with “boosters”- none of them seemed at all worried by “covid”.

robnicholson
robnicholson
11 months ago

Yeah, I took the first booster just so I could go skiing. Way to go Rob, give yourself a pat on the back 🙁

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  robnicholson

I was saved in part by being something of a hypochondriac with a specific medical history. I took an interest in how dangerous “covid” was, and it didn’t seem very dangerous, and took an interest in how the “vaccines” had been tested, and concluded that the “vaccines” may be more dangerous for me than “covid”.

libbedee
libbedee
11 months ago

Thanks for that. As you note the conflicts of interest across big pharma, the regulators and the media are staggering. I was earlier today having a rant at an article in the Telegraph about weight loss drugs being a ‘game-changer’ to the economy with the final sentence stating that the Tony Blair Institute was calling for the remit of NICE to be overhauled as it is “short-sighted” and “absurd” and their expertise is what? So I think the comment about “a handful of very rich people” is possibly scarily accurate. Organisations like NICE and SMC in Scotland with strict rules on conflicts of interest is what protects the public from those in it only to make money.

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  libbedee

I don’t know much about the workings of NICE but the principle of QALYs seems sensible. Perhaps after Sunak quoted
them in his half hearted attack on lockdowns they are no longer convenient.

What does Blair think that weight loss drugs will do for the economy? Magically make people more productive?

CircusSpot
CircusSpot
11 months ago
Reply to  libbedee

I thought the same as you and wonder if the weight loss drugs have the same Govt funded immunity as the Covid jabs. If so, a nice earner for the drug companies.

robnicholson
robnicholson
11 months ago
Reply to  CircusSpot

It is a big co-morbidity so might mean that people can work longer without going on benefits and causing further NHS pressure. But then again, if they live longer, that puts further burden on the pension/benefits systems. Not easy is it!

Curio
Curio
11 months ago
Reply to  libbedee

The Observer Revealed: drug firms funding UK patient groups that lobby for NHS approval of medicinesObserver investigation shows that majority of Nice drug appraisals involve groups financially linked to maker of pharmaceuticals…
Worth looking up the interests of those who dictate what drugs doctors should prescribe, wrapped in “guidelines” euphemisms.

LizT
LizT
11 months ago
Reply to  libbedee

Instead of NICE guidelines, I prefer the alternative NASTY guidance: No Allopathic Sh!t Thank You

Art Simtotic
11 months ago

Whatever the relative proportions of the died of, the died with and the iatrogenic, no vaccine for the common cold (4 variants of which are thought to be coronaviruses descended from the 1890 Russian flu) had ever been found – the narrative of a safe and effective vaccine against SARS-Cov-2 was flawed from the start.

Monro
11 months ago

If life expectancy with or without covid is the same, which it is, it is clearly completely made up silly stories to maintain that vaccines saved any lives at all.

But it is most certainly not fiction that covid vaccines took lives and ruined lives.

Whitty, Ferguson, Farrar thought that covid was as dangerous as Ebola. They knew how to deal with Ebola. So they believed, believe, religiously, that methods to contain Ebola would also work to contain covid.

They were hopelessly wrong; hopelessly out of their depth.

That is not, I think, a crime itself but it is mutt stupid dumb…..

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Experts who know a lot more about thrower subject than you do, yet they were out of their depth and you worked out it was cobblers from the start. How does work?

Monro
11 months ago

Religious fanatics are, generally, out of their depth in the real world.

I didn’t work out ‘that it was cobblers’.

I read up on opinions from coronavirus specialists and experienced medical scientists from the common cold unit who had discovered coronaviruses in the first place.

That is precisely what Whitty, Farrar and Ferguson (not to mention the entire expensive government machine that we, ruinously, pay for) should have done.

But Whitty et al were ‘Ebola’ experts, a different tribe, and thought they knew better; religious fanatics to this day….

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

They are experts in their field – you are a layman. You found publicly available material that probably confirmed what you were observing/suspecting, and certainly as time passed those views were confirmed by the evidence. If you’re in charge of “public health” (what a load of crap that is) then you don’t get to focus on one obscure disease. My guess – they may have genuinely panicked for a few minutes/hours/days, then they will have realised “covid” (if it exists) was what the Yanks call a “nothingburger”. They doubled down, either to save face or because, well, the object of power is power.

Monro
11 months ago

They were already part of the government medical machine and had established reputations.

They didn’t panic. They were, fanatically, convinced that they had all the answers:

‘The UK government is leading the international response to Ebola in Sierra Leone, providing technical, financial and logistical help. This article sets out the scientific basis for the UK government’s strategy to assist Sierra Leone’s government to reduce transmission. In addition to substantially scaling up conventional capacities at hospitals, the UK plan to help to build and support community isolation centres where people can voluntarily come to be isolated if they suspect that they have the disease.’

Christopher J. M. Whitty, Jeremy Farrar, Neil Ferguson, W. John Edmunds, Peter Piot, Melissa Leach & Sally C. Davies / 2014 / Nature

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Answers to what? How can they have possibly believed that “covid” was another “Ebola”? Where is the evidence that they are anything like each other? They were fanatically convinced that they could get away with feeling important, bossing people around, cementing the status of their agencies, and conducting the most expensive and evil “medical” experiment in history.

Monro
11 months ago

This is what they believed: ‘It is not SARS. The virus is in a similar family as SARS but this looks  different … and the difference is probably it is easier to pass between  human beings. I think we can expect many more cases in China and  many more cases in other parts of the world.’  As lethal as SARS, as lethal as Ebola so they used exactly the same plan thst they had used for Ebola: ‘In 2016, following the record Ebola epidemic in West Africa, the World  Health Organization decided it needed a strategy and preparedness  plan, to guide research activities in the event of future shocks. Four of  us – WHO assistant director general Marie-Paule Kieny; Ana-Maria  Henao-Restrepo, a WHO specialist in vaccines; Mike Ryan, director  of the WHO’s Health Emergencies Programme; and me – set up  something called the WHO R&D Blueprint, that would bring together  scientists, public health specialists and regulators in an emergency to  fast-track research into diagnostics, treatments and vaccines. Its first  achievement was the Merck vaccine against Ebola, which came out  of trials in Guinea during the epidemic. It was an incredible validation of what a mix of strategy and speed could pull… Read more »

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Nothing will persuade me that he did not understand the reality AND STILL DOESN’T.

Monro
11 months ago

‘….there are fears that monoclonal antibodies developed for the acute treatment of COVID-19 patients might not work as well in the South African variant. If the virus is allowed to spread unchecked, the risk grows that mutations will emerge that give Sars-CoV-2 an even greater advantage. It is only a matter of time. It would not be a surprise if at some point the virus changed so much that the vaccines no longer worked. Then we would have to watch helplessly as the pandemic returns, even if everyone has already been vaccinated — a horror scenario.’ Farrar Jan 2021 ‘We need new vaccines that actually stop infection, he says. “We are not in a good enough position to be sure this is not coming back until we can get transmission-blocking vaccines. And I don’t know if they’re possible, but I think the ambition should be there by the end of this decade or as soon as possible. “I think if we allow this amount of virus to continue to circulate we are constantly running the risk of a new variant.” Farrar Feb 2023 The mealy mouthed little sh*t has gone a bit quiet since then. He clearly now suspects that… Read more »

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

 if at some point the virus changed so much that the vaccines no longer worked” Lol.

“I think if we allow this amount of virus to continue to circulate we are constantly running the risk of a new variant.” Like flu etc etc.

All of the above translates to “there’s a real danger that people will realise “covid” was just a bad flu season, and people like me will not be considered vitally important”.

Agree the buck stops with Johnson, and with the “leaders” in other countries who were equally pathetic.

wharf girl
wharf girl
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Don’t disagree with your general argument re Covid but re religion, I think you miss the point

robnicholson
robnicholson
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Ferguson’s track record on modelling should have been enough of a red flag.

IMO the rise of global communications (MSM) and social media have a lot to answer for. Ferguson et al lit the blue touch paper but the government (very weak leadership) media (bad news sells) and social media fanned the flames during into a frenzied out of control blaze.

robnicholson
robnicholson
11 months ago
Reply to  Monro

That is not, I think, a crime itself but it is mutt stupid dumb….. I still cling onto the hope that it was all driven by incompetence, fear and misplaced “wanting to do the right thing”. The alternative is a little too horrible to contemplate. Of course entire incident, not just the vaccines, is costing us dearly. Quite literally the cost of living increases are a direct result of borrowing/spending billions on furlough, shutting down economies, test&trace, buying the vaccines etc. The list goes on. No country ever increases the health of its citizens by making itself poorer – which is exactly that we did and continue to do with Net Zero madness. There is an old phrase that when the USA sneezes, we catch a cold. Whilst I have reservations about Trump, I welcome some of the initiatives like vowing to find the real reason autism is out of control, cutting government waste and getting immigration under control. Trump’s rise has helped Reform and even if nothing comes of Reform, it’s scared our weak PM into changing gear on immigration. Like the chat about why more people don’t get that COVID was mainly a big overreaction, why our political… Read more »

MajorMajor
MajorMajor
11 months ago

We’ll never know the truth.
Like statistics about the pairs of boots produced in Orwell’s 1984, the number of people saved / killed / harmed or simply totally unaffected by the vaccines will never be known.
There is no way any government will ever say “we got it wrong, we shouldn’t have locked down and vaccinated people”.

soundofreason
soundofreason
11 months ago
Reply to  MajorMajor

That’s why we need a totally different government.

CGW
CGW
11 months ago

Since the author believes there was an illness called “Covid-19”, I recommend he reads Denis Rancourt’s works on the subject, e.g. https://denisrancourt.ca/entries.php?id=147&name=2024_12_13_opinion_what_the_declared_pandemic_was_and_was_not_the_need_to_be_political_in_the_sense_of_influencing_people_on_all_sides, which starts as follows: The spatiotemporal all-cause mortality (weekly time resolution, >100 jurisdictions) during the Covid period (the period of the declared pandemic, 2020-2023) disproves that the excess deaths could have been caused by the spreading contagion of any novel virus or its postulated variants. Concerning the vaccines (responsible for 17 million deaths globally in 2020-2022 according to Denis Rancourt’s analysis of mortality data from 125 countries), The Exposé just published the report https://expose-news.com/2025/05/10/covid-mrna-vaccines-are-a-bioweapon/, with the title “The covid mRNA “vaccines” are a bioweapon and a tool for depopulation”: A full-fledged effort to depopulate the planet is underway. It would appear that the human population is being truncated. Shortening lifespans on one end and reducing birth rates on the other. The mRNA nanoparticle injections [also known as covid vaccines] are associated with neurological disorders, autoimmune diseases, heart problems, strokes, cancers, metabolic disorders and a host of other diseases and disorders, including death. One need not be a scientist or medical doctor to figure out that by giving people chronic diseases and illnesses, you are shortening their life spans.… Read more »

transmissionofflame
11 months ago
Reply to  CGW

100%

Myra
11 months ago

These mRNA products need to be stopped. The new chikungunya vaccine was halted after 17 people had side-effects…. That is how the regulatory body should work.
https://pbs.twimg.com/card_img/1920726164131155968/3ydG747e?format=png&name=900×900

CGW
CGW
11 months ago
Reply to  Myra

I am sorry but I think the system is now too corrupt and there is no hope of, especially, the FDA and CDC doing what they are supposed to do. I have no idea what the chikungunya disease is supposed to be, nor have I heard of the Ixchiq vaccine, but the latter has already caused “17 serious adverse events, including two that resulted in death”, so the vaccine was clearly not sufficiently tested in the first place. It is also typical that vaccines are administered on people with “underlying chronic medical conditions” for which, again, the vaccine was presumably never tested. And why is a “pause” only recommended for those over the age of 60? Is there supposed to be some magical medical difference between, for example, 59 year-olds and 60 year-olds? It is all very well to state (as a justification for its continued use?) that 80,000 vaccinations have already been administered but for those 17 people it is too late now to recommend that the vaccine be paused. I know the standard argument is that the vaccine could be saving more lives than it takes but that is impossible to ever prove (without committing the crime of… Read more »

Myra
11 months ago
Reply to  CGW

My point is that with any medicine there should be a stop if side-effects come to the fore. And this definitely was the case very early with the COVID products. If the MHRA had done their job properly they would have stopped these products at that point, so effectively 4 years ago.
I am not even going to start on the use of mRNA products in people never at risk from Corona virus… that is a different discussion.
FYI There was a different chikungunya vaccine before and this was stopped when 3 people had side-effects.

CGW
CGW
11 months ago
Reply to  Myra

I certainly agree with your premise “if the MHRA had done their job properly” and wish it were only true. I fear, however, that nothing has changed.

See also https://expose-news.com/2025/01/18/during-covid-the-mhra-failed/:

“How can [the MHRA] possibly be trusted to regulate properly when it is funded largely by the companies it is tasked with regulating?” Rupert Lowe, Member of Parliament (“MP”) for Great Yarmouth said during a House of Commons debate on Thursday.

wharf girl
wharf girl
11 months ago

I confess to be being disappointed by this article. I’m a sceptic.Never had the vaccine. But instead of providing us with a clearly argued summary of his BMJ piece, this is all jabs and sarcasm and stuff I already suspected without much data to back it up. Perhaps I just have to read the BMJ piece, but that may not be comprehensible to the lay person which is precisely why I subscribe to the DS, To get important facts and arguments laid out for the intelligent amateur.

Pembroke
Pembroke
11 months ago

My 94 year old father has been in hospital recently (for dehydration) while there they gave him Covid. when i objected to him being returned home as he was still ill, I was told the NHS now regards covid as nothing more important than a cough and cold and it wasn’t grounds to keep him in.

Gezza England
Gezza England
11 months ago
Reply to  Pembroke

A dose of ivermectin with zinc and quercetin and he would be fine in hours.

DrDan
DrDan
11 months ago

Great work Dr Lataster, I really appreciate your taking the time and effort to do your research