WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2026 Poal.co

290

Coronavirus vaccines lessen the chance of you getting COVID-19 and massively reduce the risk of developing serious illness and being hospitalised. Yet at the same time, most COVID-19 deaths in England are now currently among the vaccinated. Is this a cause for alarm?

Put simply, no, says Kit Yates, senior lecturer in mathematical biology at the University of Bath. No vaccines are 100% protective, so cases, hospitalisations and deaths are still to be somewhat expected among those who’ve been jabbed – and especially in those who are older.

This is because the risk of dying from COVID-19 increases so steeply with age that even being vaccinated doesn’t lower the risk for older people down to levels that some younger people experience. Due to their age, a vaccinated 70-year-old is still at greater risk from COVID-19 than an unvaccinated 35-year-old. Given this, it isn’t surprising that more vaccinated people are dying of COVID-19 than unvaccinated people.

Coronavirus vaccines lessen the chance of you getting COVID-19 and massively reduce the risk of developing serious illness and being hospitalised. Yet at the same time, most COVID-19 deaths in England are now currently among the vaccinated. Is this a cause for alarm? Put simply, no, says Kit Yates, senior lecturer in mathematical biology at the University of Bath. No vaccines are 100% protective, so cases, hospitalisations and deaths are still to be somewhat expected among those who’ve been jabbed – and especially in those who are older. This is because the risk of dying from COVID-19 increases so steeply with age that even being vaccinated doesn’t lower the risk for older people down to levels that some younger people experience. Due to their age, a vaccinated 70-year-old is still at greater risk from COVID-19 than an unvaccinated 35-year-old. Given this, it isn’t surprising that more vaccinated people are dying of COVID-19 than unvaccinated people.

(post is archived)

[–] 3 pts

The mental gymnastics is simply amazing. Just goes to show how feeble minded people are.

[–] 3 pts

one strategy to boost young people’s willingness to take a vaccine could be to get them more involved in their local community, research suggests.

When people feel a sense of belonging to a group, this can boost healthy behaviours, particularly if they grow to feel an obligation to that group, writes Juliet Wakefield, senior lecturer in social psychology at Nottingham Trent University. This can include taking a COVID-19 vaccine. A new study shows that people who felt a stronger connection to their local community, and so felt a greater obligation to protect other community members, were more willing to get vaccinated.

If only they didn't demolish all sense of community by making a melting pot of a bunch of incompatible cultures and races everywhere.

[–] 0 pt

particularly if they grow to feel an obligation to that group

Being peer-pressured into injecting strange concoctions into your arm is good.

[–] 0 pt

Just pointing out their different plans clashing with each other. Why would anyone take an experimental injection to save a African rape gang?

[–] 0 pt

Because they're not MaxVaxxing. Only MaxVaxxers can survive, bro.

[–] 0 pt

This is fantastic news. Unless the vaccine kills half the population, this whole mess is a waste of time.

[–] 1 pt

You don't really know what they are injecting the people with. I think it's birth control shots disguised as vaccine.

[–] 0 pt

Mass birth control is perfectly fine with me, but I prefer taking out the trash to compacting it.

[–] 0 pt

Cohen19 does not exist