Anti-vaxer kickboxing champion Frederick Sinistra has died of complications from COVID after being discharged from hospital.
The 41-year-old, better known as The Undertaker, died at his home in Cine, Belgium after deciding to treat the “little virus” at home himself.

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The three-time world champion, who was forced to seek medical help by his coach in November, shared photos of himself in a hospital bed in intensive care via oxygen tubes.
After discharging himself from the hospital, the heavyweight fighter reportedly treated himself with oxygen at home.
It comes as a string of highly positive studies show Omicron IS milder than other strains, the first official UK report showing the risk of hospitalization is 50 to 70 percent lower than that of Delta. Is.
Health officials have repeatedly said that COVID booster jabs protect against Omicron and offer the best chance of surviving the pandemic.
The Sans Jabs Army campaign is helping to get vital additional vaccines into the arms of Brits to remove the need for any new restrictions.
His death was announced by his partner on a Facebook post.
The athlete had earlier shared a video in which he could be seen struggling to breathe, saying in the caption that he “has no time to waste with lazy people.”
The anti-vaxxer said in other posts that the “little virus” won’t stop him, raising his objection against government measures for Covid.
Sinistra was last active online on December 13, but died two days later after going into cardiac arrest.
According to Sudinfo, he was hospitalized after being forced out by his coach Osman Yigin.
His death comes as France has reported a record 100,000 Covid cases in a day as the Omicron version continues to spread through the country.
Medics claim that most of the patients have not been vaccinated, adding that the hospitalization has made the hospital staff worse.
France currently has more than 16,000 hospitalizations for the virus, including 3,300 patients in intensive care.
The data showed that people who have not been vaccinated against the virus are 60 times more likely to end up in intensive care after contracting COVID.
Data from the Intensive Care National Audit and Research Center (ICNARC) show that the admission rate for double-jeweled Covid victims in their 60s between May and November was just 0.6 cases per 100,000 people per week.
For people of the same age who have not been vaccinated, the rate per week was 37.3 per 100,000 – which equates to about a 60-fold higher relative risk.
Meanwhile, a doctor has revealed that nine out of ten covid patients in the ICU are unopened and beg during their stay in the hospital.
Professor Rupert Pearce, an intensive care physician in London and member of the Intensive Care Society, said it is important that people in their 20s and 30s end up in critical care wards with the virus.

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