Job 33:6
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- Jun 15, 2017
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No, it's not.
"Breakthrough cases of infection" is just another way to say infections that the vaccine failed to prevent.
It's also true that large numbers of vaccinated people are getting infected.
Not true.
Dishonesty is one of the main reasons people are vaccine hesitant.
Here is the truth. If you have never had COVID, you will have far greater protection if you've been vaccinated from severe illness, hospitalization or death. However being vaccinated will not prevent you from getting infected, nor will it prevent you from spreading the disease.
This aligns with your data that 9/10 people who are hospitalized and/or dying is unvaccinated*. But it is not "rare" for breakthrough infections to occur. They occur quite regularly.
* or partially vaccinated, or not 14 days past their second dose, or their vaccination status is unknown
Your own study contradicts your own words.
It says it right above that even in cases of breakthrough infection, you still kill the virus faster. And your study doesn't even talk about probability of getting the virus to begin with.
You have taken the study also out of context. Which is why the conclusions of the study say exactly the opposite of what you are saying. If you took a moment to read it.
I quote:
"Vaccination reduces the risk of delta variant infection and accelerates viral clearance. Nonetheless, fully vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections have peak viral load similar to unvaccinated cases and can efficiently transmit infection in household settings."
It is true that when you have the virus, you can still spread it. The vaccines will not stop you from spreading the virus If you have a breakthrough infection. But the data also clarifies and says very clearly that if you do have a breakthrough case you will kill the virus faster and will be contagious for a shorter period of time therefore limiting transmissibility. And the study says this very clearly. And the study does not touch on the overall probability of breakthrough infections, but rather it starts with a discussion of if you are contagious after you've already had a breakthrough infection.
Youre misunderstanding what the CDC has said, you're taking it out of context and you're contradicting the one study you've provided with data.
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