I was comparing a yearly death rate (from cancer), because the cancer statistics were given as a yearly death rate, to the “death rate” reported from the vaccine, which an individual would receive only once.
After you vaccinated 100% of the people, the “rate” of vaccination would be the rate at which girls turned 11 and got the vaccine, which would be the birth rate of the females in the population.
That makes the death count “one-time” as opposed to “yearly”. My point is that vaccinating 150 million women would kill (according to VAERS) 382 women. But those vaccinations would save 1900 lives EACH YEAR, over the lifetime of those women.
I could have instead adjusted the cancer rates to be a rate per person over their lifetime, but that is a harder calculation. If you assume women are sexually active from age 15 through 45, that’s 30 years in which they are susceptible to infection, and therefore could get cancer from the infection. If 1900 die each year, that means about 57000 would die over that 30 year period, so if the 150 million women we vaccinated were all 15, after 30 years 57,000 more of them would be alive than otherwise.
Except that entire paragraph is full of assumptions that are not accurate, and you can’t really find the statistics to make them accurate. What I would need is the probability of a particular woman getting cervical cancer from HPV in her lifetime.
So rather than bother, I just compared the 1900 deaths “per year” from cancer with the 382 deaths “one time” from vaccinating the entire population.
This is all moot, as the CDC has found no causal relationship between the Gardasil vaccines and deaths. In other words, there is no scientific data to support the idea that if you gave 80 million vaccinations, we’d kill twice as many people. They have administered 40 million vaccinations, and the deaths per thousand in the population receiving the vaccines has not increased. The same people are dying, with or without the vaccine.
Here's some interesting data taken directly from their website...
“Government health officials received 7,802 reports of adverse events from June 2006, when Gardasil was licensed, through April 2011.”
“The CDC received 7,802 reports of adverse events, including 15 deaths, after girls received the vaccine.”
“The agency [CDC] said definitive links between Gardasil and the deaths had not been established, but neither was such an association ruled out.”
Clearly, the data assembled by the CDC is much less alarming than the data that comes from VAERS.