A panel commanded by the government of Alberta struck the name of an expert contributor to his COVVI-19 report, saying that he was included “in error”.
The report, published without notice on Friday, was updated Tuesday to say that Dr. John Conly was interviewed only on an article cited in the report.
“The data group on data pandemic data regrets this error, and the name and biography have since been deleted,” he says now.
The correction comes after Conly, doctor and former chief of medicine at the University of Calgary, told the Globe and Mail that he demanded that his name be removed from the report.
The 269-page report calls on the government to interrupt COVVI-19 vaccines without the complete disclosure of risks and to end their use for healthy children and adolescents.
The report also recommends legislative changes to give doctors more freedom to prescribe alternative therapies in future pandemics, claiming that health authorities were too restrictive with regard to uses outside AMM.
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The report indicates remedies such as anti-parasitic anti-medication ivermectin, which lacks scientific evidence as a covid treatment.
Doctors across the country have criticized the $ 2 million exam, saying that it promotes dangerous disinformation.
The Canadian Medical Association and the Alberta Medical Association said that the panel report is reassured in medical and scientific communities.
“He talks about the widest and most diligent collaboration and international scientific consensus in history,” the president of the Alberta Medical Association, Dr. Shelley Duggan said on Monday.
Prime Minister Danielle Smith created the panel in 2022 to see how the data was collected and used to respond to COVID-19.
Smith was a faithful criticism of pandemic rules and vaccination mandates.
Dr. Gary Davidson, who directed the exam, was the former chief of emergency medicine for the central area of the province and head of the emergency department of the Red Deer regional hospital.
He rejected the idea that there is a scientific consensus.
The office of the Minister of Health, Adriana Lagrange, refuses to say if the provincial government will follow one of the recommendations of the report.
& Copy 2025 the Canadian press