Firstly, a large majority of Israelis have taken the jabs--more than in any other country. The ramification here is that the hospitalization statistics will reflect this and should be normalized to account for the difference.
Secondly, the remaining group of people who have opted out of the jabs so far, in all likelihood, disproportionately consist of individuals who have a low risk of developing severe COVID-19 symptoms. The ramification here is that our analysis should account for a lower percentage of the unjabbed group needing hospitalization in the event they contract COVID-19.
Taking those two factors into account, these results are less unexpected than one might initially think.
As for the jabbed being a danger to others, I have been writing that in this forum for months. I wholly expected that to be the case.
Bear in mind that:
Firstly, a large majority of Israelis have taken the jabs--more than in any other country. The ramification here is that the hospitalization statistics will reflect this and should be normalized to account for the difference.
Secondly, the remaining group of people who have opted out of the jabs so far, in all likelihood, disproportionately consist of individuals who have a low risk of developing severe COVID-19 symptoms. The ramification here is that our analysis should account for a lower percentage of the unjabbed group needing hospitalization in the event they contract COVID-19.
Taking those two factors into account, these results are less unexpected than one might initially think.
As for the jabbed being a danger to others, I have been writing that in this forum for months. I wholly expected that to be the case.