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by briandear
2253 days ago
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That death rate is skewed. A COVID death is counted if the person had the infection and died, even if a co-morbidity would have killed them anyway. A person that has no symptoms or mild symptoms isn’t necessary known to have had the disease, which means there is a significantly lower death rate because the known infections is what’s used for the death rate, not the actual number of infections. A newly released study showed that 4% of Santa Clara County had exposure, but the “confirmed cases” is vastly lower than that. A 5% mortality rate is just false. Confirmed infections can’t be used to determine mortality because the number of actual infections is obviously going to be much higher. Mild or asymptomatic people aren’t going to the hospital to be tested so they aren’t being included in mortality calculations. |
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[0] https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/04/17/no-evidence-peop...
[1] https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/04/200413110301074.html