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by nickthemagicman
1681 days ago
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chance of infection * chance of some complication Its a very simple intuitive calculation that is used widely throughout epidemiology. It feels like, with Covid, people try to add on unnecessary calculations or ignore important factors to shoehorn the numbers to fit a narrative. |
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7.2 million cases aged 50-64 [1]
58 million people in the US aged 50-64 [2]
So based on those numbers, 12.5% people in that bracket were infected by early November. From that you can attempt to extrapolate an infection risk per annum of around 8%.
Of course, now we're extrapolating from a time with varying degrees of voluntary and involuntary NPIs such as mask wearing and social distancing to a time where those won't be practiced widely, some of the time range we're extrapolating from also had the virus localized to regional or social communities, while now the distribution is more and more homogeneous. On the other hand, it's possible that virus spread will measurably decrease now that more and more people have some resistance through vaccination or past infections. So it's not a very reliable extrapolation at all.
[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/1254271/us-total-number-... whether or not that number is accurate is debatable, our estimates of the true number of infected vary widely
[2] https://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=age+distribution+usa