Whether you meant to or not, you're not being hyperbolic in the slightest. Non-fulminant (mild) myocarditis still has a 56% mortality rate on a ten year timeline.
Gonna play Devil's Advocate here: 10 years is a long fucking time. Like, we'd expect roughly 13% mortality in general over 10 years for any cause picking people randomly. Before 2020, Myocarditis didn't just happen spontaneously and had some underlying causes, usually age. Older people do have a high mortality.
As one heart specialist said, theres no such thing as a mild case of myocarditis
Whether you meant to or not, you're not being hyperbolic in the slightest. Non-fulminant (mild) myocarditis still has a 56% mortality rate on a ten year timeline.
Edit: spelling
Gonna play Devil's Advocate here: 10 years is a long fucking time. Like, we'd expect roughly 13% mortality in general over 10 years for any cause picking people randomly. Before 2020, Myocarditis didn't just happen spontaneously and had some underlying causes, usually age. Older people do have a high mortality.
So I'd need more information to assess that stat.
Ctrl-f 56, to get to the referenced numbers - this is a link to an NIH study on a .gov address for anyone hesitant about suspicious links