Financial analyst and data expert Edward Dowd said a new U.S. Department of Labor disability survey shows employed men and women ages 16-64 reported record harms since February 2021, with women suffering an unprecedented 55% increase in disabilities.Since February 2021, more than 1 million working U.S. women ages 16-64 have told the U.S. Department of Labor they are disabled, according to a new government report, writes reporter for the Defender, Mike Capuzzo.
The following article was written by Mike Cappuzzo and originally published in the Defender.
Disability Claims Among Women Shot Up 55% After Rollout of COVID Vaccines.
Doctors and scientists who spoke with The Defender attributed the unprecedented 55% increase in disabilities to the rollout of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) maintains the vaccines are safe and effective and recommends them for everyone age 6 months and older.
But according to former BlackRock fund manager Edward Dowd, the rise in disability claims represents an ongoing silent catastrophe — one that public health officials and major media are ignoring.
Dowd, the first to report the historic rise in excess U.S. deaths and disabilities in his book, “‘Cause Unknown’: The Epidemic of Sudden Deaths in 2021 and 2022,” continues to harvest data overlooked by mainstream media. He issues statistics-rich reports on everything from excess mortality and fertility to U.S. and U.K. disabilities, reported the new U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics monthly disability survey results last month on X (formerly Twitter). Source
The Department of Labor survey data was issued in graph form by FRED, the acronym for Federal Reserve Economic Data, an online database of hundreds of thousands of interactive data series maintained by the Research Division at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
The monthly report is a survey of respondents self-identifying as disabled and not a claim for disability and monetary compensation, Dowd said.
But the government’s disability survey is an important statistical window into U.S. public health that is tragically predictive of excess deaths, Dowd said. “Morbidity leads to mortality,” he said.
“The data is confirmation that the trend of rising U.S. disability as measured by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics is not abating,” Dowd told The Defender.
