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Why don't the numbers add up? They estimated that, by the end of 2022, there would have been an additional 120 million infections. According to Worldometer, by the end of 2022, we'd recorded about 103 million cases. These guys are proposing that, absent the vaccine, we'd have had a little more than double that. That doesn't strike me as implausible. For one thing, we know the number of reported cases is lower than the number of real cases, because some people were infected but asymptomatic and others were infected but went unreported. Lots of us took at-home tests that showed up as positive and just stayed home until whatever criteria was in place at the time said we were clear. Absent a vaccine, the disease would have spread more widely and would've caused more severe symptoms, which would've likely led to a higher rate of reporting among those who were positive.It sure did. By a metric ton.
But apparently the researchers called it a "conservative estimate", meaning they thought it was even worse than their absurd model showed.
Let's presume that your counterfactual of things being "far, far worse" were true.
In 2020, there were 352,004 deaths between March 2, 2020 and December 31, 2020.
In 2021, there were 295,019 deaths between March 2, 2021 and December 30, 2021.
But remember, in the counterfactual assessment that 3.26 MILLION deaths had been averted, that means that an ADDITIONAL 4,460 deaths would have happened every day without vaccination. There are 303 days between March 2 and December 30, which means that there would have been an ADDITIONAL 1,351,380 deaths in that time period, for a TOTAL death count of 1,646,398 between March 2, 2021 and December 30, 2021.
That is an increase of over 367% from the same time period in 2020. Are you telling me that you think that's a plausible scenario? Is that what you mean by "far, far worse"?
Am I incredulous? You bet I am. The numbers simply do not add up.
I accounted for that in my calculations above by including the same number of days from each year.
That is precisely what their estimate claims. There's no way to "avert" 3.26 million deaths in 2 years without averting an average of 4,460 deaths every single day.
Among their excess deaths, they predicted a mortality rate of 2.7%. While that's quite a bit higher than what the national numbers settled out at through 2021, it's well within the range (actually on the low side) of mortality rates seen by coastal urban states (e.g. MA, NY, CA) in early-mid 2020. I don't know if their predicted mortality rate is reasonable or not, but according to worldometer stats, the nationwide mortality rate in early 2021 was sitting somewhere around 1.85%. If their predicted number of cases was correct, but they stuck with the observed mortality rate of early 2021, then we'd still have wound up with something like 2.2 million more deaths.
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