| Thanks for the clarification. Perhaps you'd get a better response if you were to formulate your questions in a less pointed way. For example, try 'covid vaccine sceptics' instead of 'anti-vaxx'. I can't speak for the parent poster, here are some thoughts: * As I mentioned, US data is not very credible because of a data collection fumble. * There are legitimate concerns of vaccine effectiveness dropping over time: either VE is constant over time, or boosters are necessary, but not both at the same time. Note Israel is at 40% population boosted. * Recent Canada data is the most promising with VE against Delta infection of 87-92%. The catch is that the measurement stops at 5 months. Perhaps mix & match + large interval between shots is the golden recipe! * OTOH, UK data is significantly less rosy. Assuming we believe PHE data (VE is negative in 30+yo age group) or the corrected version (VE is <50% in most age groups), something doesn't add up. May the winter season be light so we can hopefully put the covid crisis past us. https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/canada-vaccine-effectiveness-... https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/... https://twitter.com/LGradaigh/status/1436095950561419280 |
Call it whatever you want, the position is still unsupported by data. Ironically, that side is typically against any form of 'political correctness.'
The UK data also doesn't support what you claim elsewhere in the thread. When adjusted for confounders, unvaccinated case rates are higher across all age groups in the UK according to the twitter link you cite above.