As I stated before multiple times this year since Omicron, the statistics do in fact show those Vaccinated are outperforming those Not Vaccinated in Covid numbers (e.g. case counts, hospitalizations and deaths) the below graph is from
Canada as of May 15th 2022 that's very similar to the United States...
https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid-19/epidemiological-summary-covid-19-cases.html
The real difference is in the hospitalization and deaths between Vaccinated versus Not Vaccinated. Yet, not discussed is the low numbers for those "partially vaccinated". As stated, there's a social variable in that the fully vaccinated are out in public much more...increasing their exposure to Covid.
- It's similar with any other vaccine in the history of vaccination.
As for "case counts" (infections)...I ignore them for Omicron versus the case counts in comparison to Delta because hospitalization / deaths followed within a few weeks of the infections (case counts).
Omicron is very different because it typically results in
mild illness. Thus, even without the Base Rate Fallacy...the vaccinated are still clearly outperforming those not vaccinated.
Maybe more importantly, as I showed in the statistics in another thread...of those hospitalized...the vaccinated have LESSER days of stay in the hospital. In addition, of those calling in sick from work...the vaccinated are out on sick days LESSER days than those not vaccinated.
Look at the Airline industry as a recent perfect example over the Memorial Day Holiday. Most of the employees that were calling in sick were
not vaccinated. It resulted in the 4 major airlines (United, American Airlines, Delta and Southwest) with
24,000 employees calling in sick from Covid...most not vaccinated.
- It resulted in +2,700 cancelled flights and +21,000 delayed flights. This is just one industry group.

My point, the Covidiots need to look far beyond the number of infections. They need to look at the hospitalizations, deaths and the impact on the American worker instead of using the same old fearmongering tactic that's been used since the mid-1900s.
wrbtrader