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PHDram
Hes talking about real numbers albeit some of which are unknowable (or at least difficult to estimate) while youre asking about policy choices. Those are two different discussions.
You guys are still managing to avoid the issues.
1. Unless you're testing everyone, the numbers for natural immunity are unknowable, which means you do not know the percentage of the population that is immune. That's a drawback.
2. All that is beside the point anyway since the medical community says get vaccinated whether you've had covid or not. (There are a number of reasons they say that.) The medical community does not say, it's fine natural immunity makes up for low levels of vaccination. For lots of different reasons, what they actually say is get vaccinated even if you think you have natural immunity.
3. You can't name any nation in the world whose official, medically endorsed policy is to act like natural immunity allows a lower percentage of vaccinations. I keep asking that, and it keeps persisting as an unanswered but important point.
Some more on all this. [
abc11.com]