While this is an interesting theory, as far as I know medical science has no way to DIRECTLY measure one's immune system. It's not as quantifiable as say one's blood pressure or PSA levels. The immune system can only be guessed at by using several factors, mostly from blood samples and lab results. I did not see in this article any discussion of how they arrived at their numbers, so on this one, I have to remain skeptical.
It's just a crude measurement comparing infection rates between vaxxed and unvaxxed in the relative age groups. It's what Pfizer uses, so that's why they chose that method, to compare apples and apples. So what they are looking at is the increase in vaxxed case rate over time compared to unvaxxed and measuring the change. It demonstrates that over time, the case rates for vaxxed continue to rise and have now surpassed the unvaxxed case rate for all age groups >30 and continue to increase.
While this is an interesting theory, as far as I know medical science has no way to DIRECTLY measure one's immune system. It's not as quantifiable as say one's blood pressure or PSA levels. The immune system can only be guessed at by using several factors, mostly from blood samples and lab results. I did not see in this article any discussion of how they arrived at their numbers, so on this one, I have to remain skeptical.
It's just a crude measurement comparing infection rates between vaxxed and unvaxxed in the relative age groups. It's what Pfizer uses, so that's why they chose that method, to compare apples and apples. So what they are looking at is the increase in vaxxed case rate over time compared to unvaxxed and measuring the change. It demonstrates that over time, the case rates for vaxxed continue to rise and have now surpassed the unvaxxed case rate for all age groups >30 and continue to increase.
The article does contain lots of good data imo.
Ok, thanks.