I guess on a 1 to 10 scale, 10 being for sure
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Sure. Just tell us about the years of experience in infectious diseases and public health you have, you know, the background that qualifies you to direct the response of healthcare systems during a global pandemic.
What?
You don't have any of that?
You're relying on your common sense?
I see. Thanks for your opinion.
So the vaccine doesn’t work then?
Also, in case you haven’t realized, Christine Elliott and Doug Ford are not medical experts.
The vaccines work. See the link I sent earlier: https://www.yalemedicine.org/news/covid-19-vaccine-comparison
Nor are you, and you don't seem to be able to find any that agree with you. You're out here on your own so far.
OK great. So if the vaccines work then why do we need to force everyone to be vaccinated, especially those who are at very low risk from hospitalization in the first place?
It's still your choice as long as you can live with consequences, so "force" may not be exactly the right word. No one is pointing a gun at you.
Unvaccinated people get sicker. They carry a high viral load longer and pass the virus on more often and more easily. This provides more opportunities for the virus to mutate, producing variants. There will always be people who can't get vaccinated and others who are more vulnerable to the virus for other reasons, so anyone who can get vaccinated should do so to help reduce the impact of the virus on those who are vulnerable, not to mention the economy.
Remember that all ages get the virus. See Figure 4 on this page: https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid-19/epidemiological-summary-covid-19-cases.html#a5. Young people may have a lower risk but they are a bigger threat to others if they are unvaccinated..
Overall vaccinated people don't get as sick and don't die as often. They place less of a load on tattered healthcare systems. When they are sick their viral load decreases faster and there is evidence that what they do pass on isn't as infectious, so they are less likely to infect others.
Most of these benefits and more are listed here: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/vaccine-benefits.html. I'd be happy to provide more links if you have more questions after reading that one.