And of those 29 deaths… TWO DEATHS WERE FROM COVID…. BOTH AMONG THE PLACEBO GROUP. Sometimes you have to drill down to the details to have understanding. Other deaths were because people simply die from things such as cancer, heart attacks, etc.
It’s statistical noise!
You take those 2 out (presuming 2 of the other 200.000 in the vax group were protected) and you now end up with 3 more deaths in the vax group than placebo.
Are two deaths out of a roughly 22,500 control group within a margin of error or beyond it for statistical purposes?
In other words, can any statistical inference be made from the two deaths? Even if the survival rate is 99.7%, that's still seven deaths out of 22,500 people, so it seems as if the two deaths is not significant (except to the families involved).
Is this right or wrong?
-PJ
Two deaths from Covid out of 45,000 people, vaxxed or not.
That fails to frighten me. Better luck nest time, Pfizer.