From what I can gather, the average suvivability of covid is commonly known as 99.7% of all age groups. Can you break it down for me on how they are calculating 99.7% from the official numbers of the cdc?
Thanks.
Edit: Is this correct, deaths/cases x 100?
From cdc, currently, 37,259,886 cases 623,244 deaths.
But I am getting 1.6%, that's 98.33% (maybe 99.7% was calc from previous numbers if someone knows?).
Sidenote, we all know the actual death is 5.5% of the covid deaths they report.
Pretty easy in Australia, just look at the government's own website at respiratory deaths: they were lower in 2020 and in 2021 they are exactly the same as the previous 5 years. So no extra people died. Which means there is no new pathogen, impossible, since it would have increased the deaths. There is no pandemic. So Covid doesn't exist.
https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/health/causes-death/provisional-mortality-statistics/jan-2020-apr-2021