ENEM

ITA

IME

FUVEST

UNICAMP

UNESP

UNIFESP

UFPR

UFRGS

UNB

VestibularEdição do vestibular
Disciplina

(UFU - 2022)How to Compare COVID Deaths for Vaccin

Outra | Comunicação com o aluno
UFU 2022UFU InglêsTurma ENEM Kuadro

(UFU - 2022)

 

How to Compare COVID Deaths for Vaccinated and Unvaccinated People

 

Looking at COVID data in recent months, it may appear that a significant proportion of the people who have died of COVID were vaccinated against the disease. But it is important to put those numbers in context. Each week in March, on average, a reported 644 people in this data set died of COVID. Of them, 261 were vaccinated with either just a primary round of shots—two doses of an mRNA vaccine or a single dose of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine—or with that primary series and at least one shot of a booster. Taken at face value, these numbers may appear to indicate that vaccination does not make that much of a difference. But this perception is an example of a phenomenon known as the base rate fallacy. One also has to consider the denominator of the fraction—that is, the sizes of the vaccinated and unvaccinated populations. With shots widely available to almost all age groups, the majority of the U.S. population has been vaccinated. So even if only a small fraction of vaccinated people who get COVID die from it, the more people who are vaccinated, the more likely they are to make up a portion of the dead. In order to avoid the pitfalls of absolute numbers, it is useful to instead look at incidence rates—usually expressed as the number of deaths per 100,000 people. Standardizing the denominator across all groups offers a very different picture.

Another way to think about the protection vaccination provides is to compare the ratios of death rates among the vaccinated and unvaccinated. It is also important to consider the ages of those who are dying. So when you separate the age groups, it becomes even clearer that vaccination reduces the risk of death. An additional factor to consider is that as the pandemic wears on and a disproportionate number of unvaccinated people die from COVID, the unvaccinated population shrinks. This leaves a comparatively larger vaccinated group, leading to an increase in total deaths despite the lower death rate among vaccinated people. No vaccine is 100 percent effective, but immunization reduces the risk of dying from COVID substantially.

Disponível em: http://www.scientificamerican.com/. Acesso em: 11 jun. 2022.

 

RESPONDA A QUESTÃO EM PORTUGUÊS. RESPOSTAS EM INGLÊS NÃO SERÃO ACEITAS.

 

Based on the text, answer the following questions.

A) Explain the fact that out of the 644 people who died of COVID, 261 were vaccinated?

B) Identify at least two conclusions presented by the authors in this article?