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Vaccine Makers Claim COVID Shots Are ‘95% Effective’ — But What Does That Mean?

Are Pfizer and Moderna misleading the public about the efficacy of their COVID vaccines by withholding the fact that there’s another way to parse their data — one that has more real-world significance?

In his introduction, Huff wrote: “Averages and relationships and trends and graphs are not always what they seem.” He added: “There may be more in them than meets the eye, and there may be a good deal less.”

Almost 70 years later, Huff’s admonition that a “well-wrapped statistic” can “sensationalize, inflate, confuse and oversimplify” seems more relevant than ever. For a pertinent modern-day example, one need look no further than COVID vaccine developers’ “headline-worthy” but misleading claims about their products’ “95% effectiveness.” As BMJ associate editor Peter Doshi and others have been confirming for months, these efficacy data are largely a matter of statistical smoke and mirrors.

Why are manufacturers’ claims about vaccine effectiveness misleading? Pfizer and Moderna declined to share with the public the fact that there is another way to parse their data that has more real-world significance.

Examining a statistic called absolute risk reduction — the number of percentage points that an individual’s risk goes down if they do something “protective” — the two companies’ COVID vaccines barely make a dent at all, reducing someone’s risk of experiencing COVID symptoms (the clinical trials’ endpoint) by less than 1%. This is the practical number that people are likely to care about most.

Knowing the paltry real-world impact of the injections on someone’s risk of developing COVID symptoms, how many people swayed by the misleading “95% effective” mantra might instead have decided to refuse the vaccines — products that have revealed themselves to be highly unsafe and, in some cases, fatal?

Unfortunately, topping its November efficacy claims for people 16 years and older, Pfizer just announced its COVID injection is “100% effective for 12-to-15 year-olds.” This announcement sets the stage for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) predicted authorization of Pfizer’s unlicensed vaccine for the adolescent market.

Parents who know that COVID rarely poses a threat to children and adolescents may already be planning to keep their kids away from the experimental shots, but there are other reasons for taking Pfizer’s latest grandiose claims with a grain of salt.

7 thoughts on “Vaccine Makers Claim COVID Shots Are ‘95% Effective’ — But What Does That Mean?

  1. It’s looking more and more like the data was fudged for these vaccines. PubMed is full of articles on the subject.

    That doesn’t mean the vaccines don’t work. It doesn’t mean they’re unsafe either.

    However, it does mean that they’re not nearly as effective as we’ve been led to believe, and there are still many unresolved issues regarding their safety.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Reblogged this on fit, fed and fasted and commented:
    It’s looking more and more like the data was fudged for these vaccines. PubMed is full of articles on the subject.

    That doesn’t mean the vaccines don’t work. It doesn’t mean they’re unsafe either.

    However, it does mean that they’re not nearly as effective as we’ve been led to believe, and there are still many unresolved issues regarding their safety.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Pingback: COVID ‘vaccines’ are not 67% to 96% effective – they are 0.84% to 1.3% effective. – Teachers Against Abuse

  4. Not to mention the FALSE POSITIVES that they can be PURPOSELY generate by running higher cycle counts. Would be interesting to know exactly what cycles were run on all of these so-called “confirmed” cases? At this point, trusting conflicted felons to produce honest numbers is like trusting a fox in the hen-house (or more fittingly, a convicted pedophile in charge of a day-care!) These people are criminals!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Pingback: Why we will never go back to normality – TheAstuteArbiter

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