Excluding microstates, Uruguay currently has the highest rate of daily reported Covid cases in the world - despite having vaccinated nearly 50% of their population - and the current seasonal wave has not yet peaked:
Back in the fall, Uruguay was universally praised for having defeated Covid with the credit being given to their "high-trust" and egalitarian social order.
Compared to the rest of South America, Uruguay certainly had done better;
Unfortunately, with accelerating cases and mortality, Uruguay is not catching up to their neighbors.
It really does appear that the impacts of Covid can be delayed but not prevented, no matter what interventions are applied:
Current case counts being dramatically higher than their neighbors, Uruguay's mortality will continue to close the gap to the rest of South America.
Notice also that Paraguay, Suriname and Guyana have seen a recent acceleration.
Covid comes to everyone, eventually.
Finally, thus far, there is no correlation between share of population vaccinated and current rates of Covid transmission.
With reported efficacy, you would think the effect would be obvious by now: shouldn't Chile and Uruguay be doing much better than their neighbors?
If there's any correlation in South America, currently, it is showing that higher rates of vaccination correlate to higher case counts.
Look at Paraguay and Uruguay: why is Uruguay doing so much worse?
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50K person study by Cleveland Clinic finds that the more doses of covid vaccine you've received, the more likely you are to become infected with covid.
Is this normally the way a "vaccine" works, by making you more susceptible to infection?
From the study:
"During an Omicron wave in Iceland, individuals who had previously received 2 or more doses were found to have a higher odds of reinfection than those who had received fewer than 2 doses of vaccine."
Also from the study:
"receipt of two or three doses of a mRNA vaccine following prior COVID-19 was associated with a higher risk of reinfection than receipt of a single dose"
Australia has released all-cause mortality data for 2022 and the results are the worst since WWII with 13% excess mortality.
Australia vaccinated their entire vulnerable population in 2021 and boosted them all in 2022.
At best, Australia is proof of vaccine failure.
While there were 10K covid deaths recorded in Australia in 2022, 3K of those covid deaths merely displaced other expected respiratory disease deaths.
In other words, 67% of excess deaths in Australia can not be blamed on covid.
So, why are so many Australians dying?
While covid deaths in Australia followed a predicable seasonal pattern, non-covid excess was much more stable, averaging a consistent ~1000 excess deaths per month and showing no signs of decline.
New Zealand, having vaccinated 80% of their population, boosted 52% and double-boosted 16%, experienced a dramatic uptick in mortality during 2022, most of which has been attributed to covid:
Sadly, excess mortality in New Zealand has continued into 2023 (during their Summer) with no sign of slowdown, yet:
The massive excess mortality experienced by New Zealand in 2022 did not display the normal seasonal waves of excess seen elsewhere - instead, NZ saw a persistent, week after week, 5% to 10% more deaths than expected.
Excess mortality in Europe during covid hysteria is more strongly correlated with national income than with vaccination rates - and not all correlated with lockdown or masking policies (obviously).
Did Switzerland due better than Bulgaria because of vaccines or wealth?
During the most recent 12 months in Europe, vaccination rates have a weak negative correlation with excess mortality.
In fact, most of the excess mortality gap in Europe occurred before widespread adoption of vaccines (2020 & early 2021).
So, the answer is wealth, not vax.
For example, here are all-cause deaths in low-vax Czechia, by year. Notice that the excess occurs in 2020 & 2021 but there was no excess mortality in 2022.
Essentially, all the vulnerable people in Czechia died before the vaccines were even available.