As of March 10, 2022, Ontario officially had 1,117,439 cases (there have been way more cases, as tons of people that have had covid didn't get tested).
Ontario has so far reported 12,618 deaths. 4% of that would be people who suffered from no conditions, so about 504.
504 healthy people in Ontario died of covid.
The odds of a healthy person in Ontario dying after getting infected with covid is .04% (that's based on the official numbers. But like I said, way more people than reported have had covid, making the odds of dying even lower. The odds of a healthy person dying after getting infected with covid are probably closer to .01%).
The odds of any random healthy person in Ontario dying of covid are even lower, though. You first have to calculate the odds of actually getting infected, then the odds of dying after getting infected. So, take any one healthy person in Ontario and the likelihood that they die of covid is likely in the .001% range.
As of March 10, 2022, Ontario officially had 1,117,439 cases (there have been way more cases, as tons of people that have had covid didn't get tested).
Ontario has so far reported 12,618 deaths. 4% of that would be people who suffered from no conditions, so about 504.
504 healthy people in Ontario died of covid.
The odds of a healthy person in Ontario dying after getting infected with covid is .04% (that's based on the official numbers. But like I said, way more people than reported have had covid, making the odds of dying even lower. The odds of a healthy person dying after getting infected with covid are probably closer to .01%).
The odds of any random healthy person in Ontario dying of covid are even lower, though. You first have to calculate the odds of actually getting infected, then the odds of dying after getting infected. So, take any one healthy person in Ontario and the likelihood that they die of covid is likely in the .001% range.
Additionally these stats are based on prior more virulent variants making ongoing measures even more absurd.