LMU University Clinic quits employee because of corona video
Munich. The Ludwig Maximilians University released a pathology employee after she complained massively about the corona measures in a video published on social media. “The LMU distances itself in the sharpest possible way,” said a statement from the Munich University on Wednesday. A house ban has already been issued against the employees. In addition, she was released from her official duties with immediate effect. “A termination without notice WILL also be initiated,” the university continues.
The young employee filmed herself in the pathology room. In the more than two-minute video, she railed about the corona measures. The reason for her video, she wishes at the beginning, was a decision by the ministry, according to which unvaccinated employees of universities and hospitals prove a negative PCR test – and pay for it themselves. That would lead to conditional dismissals because not everyone who dies can pay for the tests.
she pans the camera and shows the morgue. In her opinion, the emergency in Germany has nothing to do with Corona, but with the shortage of skilled workers. She also blamed the corona vaccination for blood clotting. Blood clots do occur and occur after vaccinations but, according to a study from the summer, it occurs significantly less often than after the corona disease itself.
The LMU does not understand the statements made by the young pathologist: “In the current situation, everyone has to be careful and considerate in order to help sick people as best as possible and to support the heavily stressed health care staff,” the university announced. The dissemination of such videos certainly does not contribute to this.
Covid deaths in federal states with a low vaccination rate
In Thuringia, Saxony and other federal states with a low vaccination rate, significantly more people are currently dying of and with Corona in relation to the population than in the better vaccinated north of Germany. In Thuringia, there were more than six times as many corona deaths in relation to the population in the last seven days as in Bremen, the country with the highest vaccination rate (data as of December 1). This can be read on the “Corona Maps” of the Institute for Statistics at Munich’s Ludwig Maximilians University. The basis is the data from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) and the health authorities.
There is the best evidence that shows that .. A higher vaccination rate leads to a lower hospitalization rate and less occupancy in intensive care units and then also has an effect on the probability of death, said Göran Kauermann from the LMU Statistics Institute of the German Press Agency. The relative risk of vaccinated people to end up in an intensive care unit is much lower. “It all points in the same direction,” said the scientist, even if, according to the scientist, there is “no hard-hitting causal conclusion”.