- Oct 17, 2009
- 42,464
- 13,519
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Non-Denom
- Marital Status
- Single
As you learned, vaccinated people are much less likely to become infected, compared to unvaccinated people. No point in denial; that just a fact. Is it likely that a person who is active in public affairs will be exposed to many more people? Yes, likely so. But that doesn't change the data, which clearly show that unvaccinated people are at a much higher risk of infection and death.
Which of these vaccinated people were hospitalized or became seriously ill? It's possible that I was infected at some point, and never got symptoms. Because I was vaccinated. And as you know, fully vaccinated people are much less likely to get infected at all.
Unvaccinated Americans have died at 11 times the rate of those fully vaccinated since the delta variant
became the dominant strain, indicate surveillance data gathered over the summer by the US Centers for
Disease Control. Vaccinated people were 10 times less likely to be admitted to hospital and five times less likely to be infected than unvaccinated people, found one study that tracked adults across 13 states and cities.1 Levels of protection were lower than were conferred by vaccines offered at the end of spring, the study found. Vaccine efficacy has declined since the delta variant became dominant around 20 June. The decline in efficacy against hospital admission or death was small, but the protection offered against infection has slipped more significantly. From 4 April to 20 June unvaccinated people died from covid-19 at 16.6 times the rate among the fully vaccinated (95% confidence interval 13.5 to 20.4). Between 20 June and 17 July that rate fell to 11.3 (9.1 to 13.9). Before 20 June admissions of unvaccinated people with covid-19 to hospital were running at 13.3 (11.3 to 15.6) times the rate among the vaccinated, but this had fallen to 10.4 (8.1 to 13.3) after that date. Unvaccinated people were infected at 11.1 (7.8 to 15.8) times the rate of the vaccinated before 20 June but at only 4.6 (2.5 to 8.5) times the rate thereafter.
https://infomed.com.ar/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/bmj.n2282.full_.pdf
Same old talking points. Since then, they have finally had to admit that they didn't get it right after all. Of course, those who pointed out that fact long ago have always been called "science deniers".
Upvote
0