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You think that the CDC's statistical criteria don't involve exceeding the base rate in a statistically significant manner?
What's the base rate, what are the criteria for reporting?
So what we have is this: CDC did additional investigation, found nothing. Two conclusions:
(1) There is nothing there, the initial system that triggered the investigation was just picking up usual numbers
(2) There is something there, and the CDC, Pfizer, and other countries are all lying and covering up
Original post is trying to incline us to number (2). I want to know what is the base rate and how was it exceeded, if it was exceeded, before I throw ni with "it's all a cover-up".
Even if it is a real risk, how many of us are over 65? OP is using "risk of strokes in over 65" as an argument not to get any boosters, on the grounds that "if this is happening to them, what is happening to younger people?" and that's where the link needs to be demonstrated.
For instance, stroke is increasing among younger adults. Down to the vaccine? No, this is the conclusion of a 29 year study looking at data from 1990-2019:
So the reporting system may well be picking up something to do with strokes, but that it's down to the Covid vaccine alone has not been proven. Apparently, globally the incidence of stroke is going up, due to increased risk factors like obesity, high blood pressure, smoking, etc. And the rate of brain hemorrhage amongst younger adults, due to uncontrolled high blood pressure, is also increasing:
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