But that's exactly what this post is trying to do: compare populations of different sizes using only an isolated subset population. It is an error to treat the ratio of two subset populations as an indication of probability in the total populations unless you also factor in their relative size.
There’s one more thing I forgot to mention. A ton of nurses and doctors got fired because they weren’t allowed to work without being vaxxed. As a result, hospitals accepted less patients, and you might actually see a decline in hospitalization rates.
So, it might actually be better to look at overall mortality rates during Covid
But that's exactly what this post is trying to do: compare populations of different sizes using only an isolated subset population. It is an error to treat the ratio of two subset populations as an indication of probability in the total populations unless you also factor in their relative size.
Yep. And I agree with you on that. The comparisons are moot and meaningless.
There’s one more thing I forgot to mention. A ton of nurses and doctors got fired because they weren’t allowed to work without being vaxxed. As a result, hospitals accepted less patients, and you might actually see a decline in hospitalization rates.
So, it might actually be better to look at overall mortality rates during Covid