We address this gap by comparing SARS CoV-2 infection by vaccination status from February 1, 2021 to August 13, 2021 in the Veterans Health Administration, covering 2.7% of the U.S. population. Vaccine protection declined by mid-August 2021, decreasing from 91.9% in March to 53.9% (p<0.01, n=619,755).
The study covered 2.7% of the US population but said effectiveness was 53.9%.
I'm not trying to defend the jab but that doesn't mean we should use fake data like they do.
Here we go a study from Lancet, showing the highest efficacy of any C19 vaccine being 1.3%
ARRs tend to be ignored because they give a much less impressive effect size than RRRs: 1·3% for the AstraZeneca–Oxford, 1·2% for the Moderna–NIH, 1·2% for the J&J, 0·93% for the Gamaleya, and 0·84% for the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccines.
This is some fucking awful reporting. I was curious so I followed the source (this was citing some shit blog, and that blog was citing this: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.10.13.21264966v1.full.pdf )
The study covered 2.7% of the US population but said effectiveness was 53.9%.
I'm not trying to defend the jab but that doesn't mean we should use fake data like they do.
Here we go a study from Lancet, showing the highest efficacy of any C19 vaccine being 1.3%
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanmic/article/PIIS2666-5247(21)00069-0/fulltext