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by elmomle
344 days ago
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It is correct. They are considering the most extreme case; in the most extreme case, no non-botulism-infected infants eat honey, and honey was the cause of botulism for those 20 infants. If that is so, then completely removing honey exposure for infants would mean that 80 rather than 100 infants get botulism poisoning. So the new probability of contracting botulism is (80 / 100) * (old probability), and (80 / 100) * (1 / 40000) = 1 / 50000. |
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