The excuse you will hear is that the unvaccinated are the smallest percentage of the population which is why we see numbers where they report lower.
Although it does not fare well that the 70% of the population that are vaxd cover 90% of the cases. Riddle me how that works - clown world.
Yes, that is why I would like to see stats that don't compare with absolute numbers, but do so with relative numbers, within each group. It is too easy to "attack" these numbers by stating that there are many more vaxxed than unvaxed.
These data aren't considering absolute numbers at all: they're "positivity rates", meaning that the size of the group measured does not matter. So yes, not vaccinated individuals have the lowest incident RATE of COVID-19 positivity among all groups from 4/14 through 4/20. If you look at 100 people or 1,000,000 people, the rate stays true: the not vaccinated showed the fewest % of people who had a positive COVID-19 result.
The excuse you will hear is that the unvaccinated are the smallest percentage of the population which is why we see numbers where they report lower. Although it does not fare well that the 70% of the population that are vaxd cover 90% of the cases. Riddle me how that works - clown world.
Yes, that is why I would like to see stats that don't compare with absolute numbers, but do so with relative numbers, within each group. It is too easy to "attack" these numbers by stating that there are many more vaxxed than unvaxed.
These data aren't considering absolute numbers at all: they're "positivity rates", meaning that the size of the group measured does not matter. So yes, not vaccinated individuals have the lowest incident RATE of COVID-19 positivity among all groups from 4/14 through 4/20. If you look at 100 people or 1,000,000 people, the rate stays true: the not vaccinated showed the fewest % of people who had a positive COVID-19 result.