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Science Deniers Try to Take Over a Sarasota Public Hospital
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<blockquote data-quote="probinson" data-source="post: 76844666" data-attributes="member: 121249"><p>February 10, 2021 marked the beginning of the COVID vaccination campaign in South Korea. Let's see where that falls on the epi curve;</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]319394[/ATTACH] </p><p></p><p>So for almost the whole first year of the pandemic, from March 1, 2020 to February 20, 2021, no vaccines were available and infections in South Korea stayed at very low numbers. After vaccination began, the chart above seems to show neither an increase or decrease in infections for months. That is, until you zoom in and use a log scale;</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]319395[/ATTACH] </p><p></p><p>Now, you can see infections slowly creeping up and a clear upward trend in infections becomes quite obvious, not from the time new variants emerged, but from the very first day of the mass vaccination campaign. In fact, the only day with a lower infection rate once vaccination began was February 13, 2021 with an infection rate of 7.25 per million. Every other day since vaccination has begun in South Korea has a higher infection rate than the first day vaccinations were introduced.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Indeed. </p><p></p><p>Feel free to point out on any epi curve in any location anywhere in the world where you can see a correlation between the introduction of vaccines in the reduction of infections.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="probinson, post: 76844666, member: 121249"] February 10, 2021 marked the beginning of the COVID vaccination campaign in South Korea. Let's see where that falls on the epi curve; [ATTACH=full]319394[/ATTACH] So for almost the whole first year of the pandemic, from March 1, 2020 to February 20, 2021, no vaccines were available and infections in South Korea stayed at very low numbers. After vaccination began, the chart above seems to show neither an increase or decrease in infections for months. That is, until you zoom in and use a log scale; [ATTACH=full]319395[/ATTACH] Now, you can see infections slowly creeping up and a clear upward trend in infections becomes quite obvious, not from the time new variants emerged, but from the very first day of the mass vaccination campaign. In fact, the only day with a lower infection rate once vaccination began was February 13, 2021 with an infection rate of 7.25 per million. Every other day since vaccination has begun in South Korea has a higher infection rate than the first day vaccinations were introduced. Indeed. Feel free to point out on any epi curve in any location anywhere in the world where you can see a correlation between the introduction of vaccines in the reduction of infections. [/QUOTE]
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