Your own link disproves this nonsense
It states during early pandemic (Mar - Apr) the excess was due to covid
During later months excess is due to other issues (mental health, od, suicides)
Been discussed already
More TeeJay facts.which again is opposite to what the article has written.
Leave it to you to supposedly read something and assume the exact opposite of the words that are written to be true. Nowhere does it state your made up facts of "Mar-Apr", or "mental health and suicides".
Just as your ridiculous assessments that there is no excess number of deaths from COVID, but why expect anything factual from you that is driven from actual data and known facts, when you're incapable of reading and understanding.
Here is a part of the article. I highlighted the important parts specially the dates so it's easier for you to read and understand.
Deaths from other causes also up in some provinces in 2020
Statistics Canada also released today
provisional data on the causes of death covering the period from January to mid-December 2020. The provisional results on causes of death, while not complete, do allow for some insight into changes in mortality during the pandemic.
The cause of death has been reported for 94% of the deaths that occurred during the first period of excess mortality in Canada—from March to June.
Based on data received to date,
from March to June, the number of deaths from certain causes rose in several provinces compared with the same period in previous years. For example, the number of deaths caused by heart disease in Ontario rose from 4,125 in the spring of 2019 to 4,345 in the spring of 2020, which was higher than in the spring of any of the previous five years. While overdose deaths across Canada appeared to decline in 2019 from highs in 2017 and 2018, there are early signs of an increase in 2020. For example, Alberta reported 220 deaths caused by overdoses from March to June 2020, compared with 170 overdose deaths during same time period in 2019. This could be an early indication of the indirect impacts of the pandemic, in advance of the period when excess mortality started to trend among younger age groups.