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Re: RioDad post# 30358

Wednesday, 01/12/2022 5:42:30 PM

Wednesday, January 12, 2022 5:42:30 PM

Post# of 36559
Full disclosure I have been vaccinated twice and am elderly (78 years)

You need to come to the realization that the Vaccines have failed to prevent reinfection and spread. Up to 40% the fully vacinated are infecting others. Only a small percentage of the population , those having co-morbitities, and are un-vaccinated are dying or getting serious complications. Taken as a whole ONLY 21.2 percent of the population is at risk of serious illness or dying, they are the ones needing the vaccine. The vaccines with their present efficacy are unjustified for 79% of us.

With Delta, we saw 43 percent of patients needing to be hospitalized while just over 5 percent died. With Omicron, although it is still early, we are seeing just under 15 percent of patients need hospitalization, and thus far, just under 1 percent have died,” said Long
https://www.advisory.com/daily-briefing/2020/07/13/covid-risk

"The majority of people who become infected with coronavirus are not expected to become seriously ill, but a large segment of the U.S. adult population – one third (37.6 percent) of adults ages 18 and older – have a higher risk of serious illness if they do become infected due to their age or underlying medical condition."

Overall only 21.2 percent of adults 18 and under 65 are at risk for Serious illness to COV19. This is among the unvaccinated
https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/issue-brief/how-many-adults-are-at-risk-of-serious-illness-if-infected-with-coronavirus/

Charted: Who's at highest risk of dying from Covid-19?

Study details
For the study, published in an early form on Wednesday in Nature, researchers analyzed data from the United Kingdom's National Health Service on 17,278,392 adults who were tracked for three months. During that time, 10,926 died from Covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, or from complications related to the disease.

The researchers found that patients above the age of 80 were at least 20 times likelier to die from Covid-19 than patients in their 50s, and hundreds of times likelier to die from Covid-19 than patients younger than 40.

The researchers also found that men were about 59% more likely to die from Covid-19 than women. In addition, patients of racial and ethnic minorities—who made up around 11% of all patients tracked for the study—had a higher risk of dying from Covid-19 than white patients. The risk of dying from Covid-19 was especially high among Black and South Asian patients when compared with others, the researchers found.

The researchers also concluded that patients with underlying medical conditions—including respiratory disease, chronic heart disease, diabetes, and obesity—were more likely to die from