Jump in excess mortality in Germany: November +21%, December +22% Experts warned about this a year and a half ago. I have already published excess mortality statistics for the United States. This data is for Germany. Many doctors warned that vaccination would lead to a significant increase in mortality due to mass deaths from side effects spread over time (heart attacks, strokes, thromboembolism). I also wrote about this earlier. It turns out that all these warnings were confirmed experimentally. Despite the fact that the peak of deaths is promised in 3-5 years after vaccination. Comparison of total mortality with the number of COVID-19 deaths reported at the Robert Koch Institute (RKI). In November (https://bit.ly/3IawlO2), the mortality rate was 15,723 cases, or 21% higher than the average for previous years, and already in December this figure was 22% (https://bit.ly/ 3rwVBaw). In addition, reported deaths from COVID-19 only partly explained the increase in deaths. There are several reasons for the additional increase in deaths: there may be deaths from COVID-19 or a shift in the timing of deaths during the year as a result of the influenza wave that occurred at the beginning of the year. The consequences of previous surgeries and preventive examinations may also appear. However, the contribution of individual effects cannot currently be counted. At the country level, the number of deaths cannot currently be displayed for the entire calendar year. In November 2021, they were above the corresponding average for the previous four years in all states. The highest deviations were in Saxony (+49% or 2,184 cases), Thuringia (+47% or 1,124 cases) and Bavaria (+32% or 3,529 cases). Also in Saxony-Anhalt, Brandenburg and Baden-Wurttemberg, deviations were 20% or more. Thus, the excess mortality data was most evident in states where rates of corona infections had also previously been highest. In the city states of Berlin, Hamburg and Bremen, the deviations were the smallest - here the number of deaths was less than 10% higher than the comparative figure in previous years. Increase in deaths in December also in other European countries The Euro MOMO Mortality Evolution Network sorts results by excess mortality based on its own under-reporting count and its own concept of excess deaths across Europe for comparison. Germany and neighboring states Denmark, Belgium, France, Switzerland and Austria reported moderate to high mortality (from “moderate excess” to “high excess”) during the December weeks. So far, in the Netherlands, excess mortality in the first two weeks of December has been classified as very high (“very high excess”).