Insurance executive fired for sounding alarm on vaccine effects

Another insurer has joined the fray of life insurance providers who are seeing an astounding spike in vaccine-related side effects and even deaths.

Andreas Schöfbeck is a member of the board of BKK Provita, a Bavarian provider under the larger German firm BKK Insurers. 

At least, he was

Schöfbeck was terminated yesterday after sounding the alarm last week regarding the increase in complications arising from the COVID-19 vaccine. 

According to a report in the German news outlet Welt, an analysis of BKK’s nearly 11 million customers prompted Schöfbeck to speak out. 

"According to our calculations, we consider 400,000 visits to the doctor by our policyholders because of vaccination complications to be realistic to this day,” Schöfbeck told Welt. “Extrapolated to the total population, this value would be three million.” 

Schöfbeck also accused the Paul Ehrlich Institute (PEI), which is Germany’s medical regulatory body, of misreporting. 

"The numbers that resulted from our analysis are very far away from the publicly announced numbers,” he added. “It would be unethical not to talk about it." 

Schöfbeck also wrote a letter to PEI President Paul Cichutek detailing the analysis of the vaccine’s effects on the 10.9 million BKK customers, which showed that an estimated 2.5-3 million people have received medical care as a result of the vaccine's effects. 

PEI officials reportedly called a meeting with BKK. Then yesterday, before the meeting, Schöfbeck was suddenly terminated..

Schöfbeck is only the latest in a growing list of insurance providers who are speaking up regarding the vaccine. 

Last week, Frontline News reported that life insurance providers are becoming inundated with death-benefit claims. 

“We are seeing, right now, the highest death rates we have seen in the history of this business,” said OneAmerica Chief Executive Scott Davison in December.  

Davison said that not only are deaths at an all-time high, but a 40% increase is way beyond what would be considered a "catastrophe”.  

“Just to give you an idea of how bad that is, a three-sigma or a one-in-200-year catastrophe would be a 10 percent increase over pre-pandemic. So 40 percent is just unheard of,” Davison said.