Looking at the report, this further proves chance of death from covid is 1) still very low for unvaccinated and 2) has no significant difference if you take the vaccine. This report conveniently leaves out a comparison of the death rate for vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Assuming death rate is calculated at deaths/cases * 100%, looking at the data, this is what I get: *per 100,000 Jan - Oct # cases* # deaths* Death Rate All ages Unvaccinated 14,196 463.7 3.266413074 All ages vaccinated 315.9 11.6 3.672048116

This is further proving that the vaccine does not prevent death... Pulling the numbers from the 'Delta' spike: Sept - Oct # cases* # deaths* Death Rate All ages Unvaccinated 1,767 63.66 3.602716469 All ages vaccinated 133.8 3.2 2.391629297

This is only slightly lower and the assumed error can easily address this small percentage decrease in death (among the vaccinated) due to the small number of people in this time period.

What is clear from this is that people who are 'fully vaccinated' are less likely to get covid, but that could be a result of 1) small vaccination numbers (during this time fully vaccinated people made up 40 - 50% of the state's population) and 2) people willing to get vaccinated are more likely to live life more 'cautiously' and as a result are less likely to expose themselves to the virus.

Thank you for sharing this. It further proves that my chance of death from covid is roughly the same if I were vaccinated vs now when I am not.

Nov 14, 2021
at
7:43 PM