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Igor Chudov's avatar

Great article! This is what we should have, an exchange of thoughts and open disagreement.

The so called "science" should give reinfections a very close look, and look at them in the context of many things, one of them being vaccination status. Unfortunately, very few of such studies are done because, probably, they are not financed by whoever wields the purse strings.

I would personally be delighted if more people were studied and the studies dissected participants along many angles better.

Your question about reinfections such as infection --> vaccination --> reinfection vs vaccination --> infection --> reinfection is a good one.

Defining reinfections using PCR tests misses two things:

- People who did not test one of their illnesses with PCR and used a rapid test, more applicable to the later time in the pandemic

- PCR tests with too high cycle thresholds can give false positive, especially if people are tested repeatedly. For example, if 1 out of 50 tests is a false positive, and some people are tested weekly, then those people will be reported "infected" once a year even if they never are ill at all.

But, sadly we have what we have. Results of this study agree with what many of us observe, UKHSA case rates when they were published, etc

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Clarisse's avatar

Right out of author’s mouth:

This finding should be interpreted with caution because of limitations of our study, which include the inability to adjust for the complex relationships among prior infection, vaccine eligibility, and underlying conditions.

Thanks for interpreting with caution, cause I’ve seen quite a few who did not. A very underwhelming study. And quite frankly a useless attempt at science- are there no great thinkers left? Why are such basic questions left unanswered?

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