A reminder that even people on our own side are insane.
(media.kotakuinaction2.win)
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I'm sure it is less than 1%, but we don't have data to support any answer, really.
For example, the 0.89% unvaccinated hospitalization rate they claim in that article would include people who got sick and hospitalized before they knew COVID was a thing, and the vaccinated rate would not.
The most at risk elderly who died all would fall into the unvaccinated group, because that all happened before the vaccine was released.
Either way, to calculate the actual rate you'd need to know numbers for how many people caught it, and that's un-knowable.
nah, it's a bounding problem. hospitalization rate is just hospitalizations divided by infections.
hospitalizations number is known.
infections number, we know the lower bound, and it's likely substantially higher.
the known infections number is high enough that hospitalization rate is <1%. the likely infections is substantially higher, which would mean the hospitalization rate is only lower inside that bound, meaning <0.1% or something.