Is there any basis to believe that effect even exists? Wouldn't it be more likely that people who see doctors more often for other conditions are more likely to be vaccinated?
Look at the demographics for flu vaccines. Are they predominately taken by older people worried about the flu or 30 year old construction workers?
Only "35.7 percent of adults ages 18 to 64 years old got the flu shot last season" whereas "Among 3.5 million Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine recipients, 9.2% were aged 12–17 years, 69.4% were aged 18–64 years." - https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/wr/mm7043e2.htm?s_cid=mm7043e2_w
There's studies on this topic -- google google up a couple and see if you find them convincing.
But that's irrelevant to the point I made, which is that the article lies about what the CDC is saying.
The article claims The CDC just released an analysis that after you get vaccinated, your all-cause mortality drops by 72% if you are age 18-44.
Actually not only did the CDC not did make that absurd claim, they didn't even imply it. They specifically said the lower mortality in the vaccinated group is likely due to the "healthy vaccinee effect".
If that's wrong, someone should write an article saying: The CDC is wrong when they claim that people who decide to get vaccinated are healthier than people who don't
The author of that article could google up studies critical of the "healthy vaccinee effect" and discuss them.
In the meantime, any article that says The CDC just released an analysis that after you get vaccinated, your all-cause mortality drops by 72% if you are age 18-44 is just simply false.