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#1 | |
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ven with widely available vaccines and newly effective treatments, residents of counties that went heavily for Donald Trump in the last presidential election are more than twice as likely to die from COVID-19 than those that live in areas that went for President Biden. That's according to a newly-updated analysis 2018 Deaths in the United States increased by 19% between 2019 and 2020 following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020 — the largest spike in mortality in 100 years. And deaths remained elevated in 2021 as the threat of the COVID-19 pandemic continued, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s July 1, 2021, population estimates. 2019 The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic resulted in 5,817,385 reported cases and 362,705 deaths worldwide through May, 30, 2020,? including 1,761,503 aggregated reported cases and 103,700 deaths in the United States.? many people have not upgraded the vaccine to the latest version. my math is not off. you really should do better research Last edited by David Lee; 06-02-2024 at 03:48 PM. |
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All you posted was the increase in the death rate due to Covid between 2019/2020. You have no data showing unvaccinated vs. vaccinated so how can you make the statement "tell all the dead people who followed his idea about not getting vaccinated"? Your math is not off, it's not there!
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#3 | |
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I've already told you that I posted where my research came from. Why don't you try reading my post instead of just responding.
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you gave the website but not the article. what article.
Last edited by David Lee; 06-02-2024 at 05:44 PM. |
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It's right on the very top of my post!
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#7 |
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nice mine quoting. a dishonest tactic. when you show the entire position it changes
There are several factors at play here, including a rising share of the population that is vaccinated, waning immune protection and low uptake of boosters, and changes in immunity among the unvaccinated. New variants combined with a reduction in masking and other non-pharmaceutical interventions may also lead to more transmission, which can in turn lead to more deaths. During the early rollout of vaccines, vaccinated people represented a small share of total deaths, but experts warned that the share would likely rise simply because vaccinated people were representing a growing share of the population. In other words, if 100% of people in the U.S. were vaccinated, vaccinated people would represent 100% of COVID-19 deaths. Similarly, as the share of the population with a booster rose somewhat during 2022, the share of deaths among boosted people also rose. COVID-19 vaccines are very effective at preventing severe illness and death, but they are not perfect, so deaths among vaccinated people will still occur. Indeed, vaccinated people now make up the majority of the population ? 79% of adults have completed at least the primary series ? and the latest CDC data show that vaccinated people also now represent the majority of COVID-19 deaths. There are many more vaccinated people than there are unvaccinated people, and vaccinated and boosted people are, on average, older and more likely to have underlying health conditions that put them at risk for severe COVID-19 outcomes. That?s why, when CDC adjusts for some of these factors (age and population size), we still see that unvaccinated people are at much greater risk of death and other severe outcomes than people the same age who have stayed up-to-date on boosters. Older people are at greater risk for severe illness and death from COVID-19 than younger people, but vaccines and boosters still lower that risk substantially. |
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