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No, this is not what was stated, not what was requested by the FDA, and not what anyone believed about vaccines at the time. Here's the FDA guidance for development and licensure from June 2020. Scroll down to page 13 and start looking through the Efficacy Considerations section:
This is pretty normal, what everyone would have considered the bog-standard endpoint until the Covid vaccine retconning started up. You check whether the vaccine prevents infection and you get a double-whammy - can't die from something you're not infected with and can't infect other people with something you're not infected with.
This phrasing makes zero sense if the expectation was that the only thing anyone would test for is whether vaccination impacted severity. Severity was worth checking as a secondary endpoint precisely because it's possible that you'd impact severity without impacting likelihood of infection and transmission, but this would generally be considered a disappointing result.
Of course, that might just be what the FDA wanted to see and the companies weren't able to meet that criterion, or elected to go with other study designs. We can look at the original December 2020 emergency approval of the Pfizer vaccine though:
Severity shows up under the secondary efficacy endpoints. Their results:
The specificized success criterion was preventing infection. The stated effect was preventing infection. Anyone that now tells you that the scientists were only testing whether it made individuals less likely to die is badly misinformed or is telling a whopper.
Thanks for the specific quotes. I'll save this one to reference it.
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You are saying "stops infection" where I am saying "stops transmission."
I guess when I said "only testing" I should have said "only proving."
What is the proposed mechanism for transmission without infection?
You are looking at "how do you get A without B" when I am looking at "given B can we stop A" which is a different thing.
Putting aside the logical incoherence of transmission without infection, I'm at least glad we can agree that your original claim that "scientists said that they were only testing for making individuals less likely to die" is demonstrably a retcon.
Yes, the thing that I never said, it is logically incoherent. Yes.
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