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More than 2 Billion Covid Shots Have been Given, 30% of Global Population

shockshiok

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/covid-vaccine-tracker-global-distribution/

More Than 2.01 Billion Shots
Given: Covid-19 Tracker​

In the U.S., 298 million doses have been administered
Updated: June 3, 2021, 4:59 PM EDT

The biggest vaccination campaign in history is underway. More than 2.01 billion doses have been administered across 176 countries, according to data collected by Bloomberg. The latest rate was roughly 36.4 million doses a day.
In the U.S., 298 million doses have been given so far. In the last week, an average of 999,474 doses per day were administered.

World Map of Vaccinations​

More than 2.01 billion doses have been administered—enough to fully vaccinate 13.2% of the global population

Enough doses have now been administered to fully vaccinate 13.2% of the global population—but the distribution has been lopsided. Countries and regions with the highest incomes are getting vaccinated more than 30 times faster than those with the lowest.

Uneven Access to Vaccines​


Least wealthy






Most wealthy

The wealthiest 27 places have 28.6% of the vaccinations…
Vaccines
India
Mainland China
U.S.

Hover for more comparisons
Population
India
Mainland China

…but 10.4% of the world's population
Note: Vaccine access calculations account for the number of doses needed for full protection; some vaccines require a two-dose regimen while others require just a single dose. Countries and regions are ordered by GDP per capita (PPP).

When will life return to normal?​

While the best vaccines are thought to be 95% effective, it takes a coordinated campaign to stop a pandemic. Anthony Fauci, the top infectious-disease official in the U.S., has said that vaccinating 70% to 85% of the U.S. population would enable a return to normalcy.

On a global scale, that’s a daunting level of vaccination. At the current pace of 36.4 million a day, it would take another year to achieve a high level of global immunity. The rate, however, is steadily increasing, and new vaccines by additional manufacturers are coming to market.

The Path to Immunity Around the World​



In the U.S., the latest vaccination rate is 999,474 doses per day, on average. At this pace, it will take another 6 months to cover 75% of the population.


↑↓


  • Average daily rate estimate
Dec. 29
Feb. 6
March 17
April 25
June 3
Doses administered: 5M
4
3
2
1
0

Note: Immunity calculations take into account the number of doses required and the current rate of administration for each vaccine type. The “daily rate estimate” is a seven-day trailing average; interpolation is used for jurisdictions with infrequent updates. *Coverage may exceed 100% in some places, as shots may be administered to non-residents. Data are from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker.
Did we miss a place? Drop us a link

Are we bending the curve yet?​

Israel was first to show that vaccinations were having a nationwide effect. The country has led the world in vaccinations, and by February more than 84% of people ages 70 and older had received two doses. Severe covid cases and deaths declined rapidly. A separate analysis in the U.K. showed similar results.

It’s now a life-and-death contest between vaccine and virus. New strains threaten renewed outbreaks. In the early stages of a campaign, the effect of vaccinations are often outweighed by other factors of transmissibility: virus mutations, seasonality, effectiveness of mask use and social distancing. In time, higher vaccination rates should limit the Covid-19 burden around the world.

Vaccinations vs. Cases​

Covid rates have generally flattened or declined where vaccination rates are highest. Currently, 13 places have administered enough shots to cover at least 40% of the population.

United States (46.4% covered)

↑↓


Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
People covered: 75%
50
25
0


  • Seven-day average
Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
New cases per million: 1,000
800
600
400
200
0

Note: “People covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Vaccine data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Tracker. Cases data: Johns Hopkins University.

Methodology and Analysis​

Since the start of the global vaccination campaign, countries have experienced unequal access to vaccines and varying degrees of efficiency in getting shots into people’s arms. Before March, few African nations had received a single shipment of shots. In the U.S., 89.7 doses have been administered for every 100 people.

Delivering billions of vaccines to stop the spread of Covid-19 worldwide will be one of the greatest logistical challenges ever undertaken.

Race to End the Pandemic​

Seychelles leads the world, with enough vaccinations to cover 70.0% of its population


↑↓

UAE
UAE
Seych.
Seych.
U.K.
U.K.
U.S.
U.S.
Aruba
Aruba
Afgh.
Afgh.
Angola
Angola
Alb.
Alb.
Andorra
Andorra
Argen.
Argen.
Armenia
Armenia
Antigua
Antigua
Aus.
Aus.
Austria
Austria
Azer.
Azer.
Belgium
Belgium
Benin
Benin
Bang.
Bang.
Bulg.
Bulg.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Baha.
Baha.
Belarus
Belarus
Belize
Belize
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bol.
Bol.
Brazil
Brazil
Barb.
Barb.
Brunei
Brunei
Bhutan
Bhutan
Bots.
Bots.
Switz.
Switz.
Chile
Chile
Mainland China
Mainland China
Iv. Coast
Iv. Coast
Camer.
Camer.
DR Congo
DR Congo
Rep. Congo
Rep. Congo
Col.
Col.
Comoros
Comoros
C. Verde
C. Verde
Co. Rica
Co. Rica
Curaçao
Curaçao
Cayman
Cayman
Cyprus
Cyprus
Cz. Rep.
Cz. Rep.
Germany
Germany
Dji.
Dji.
Domca.
Domca.
Den.
Den.
Dom. Rep.
Dom. Rep.
Alg.
Alg.
Ecuador
Ecuador
Egypt
Egypt
Spain
Spain
Est.
Est.
Ethio.
Ethio.
Finland
Finland
Fiji
Fiji
France
France
Micronesia
Micronesia
Gabon
Gabon
Georgia
Georgia
Ghana
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea
Gambia
Gambia
Guinea-Bis.
Guinea-Bis.
Eq. Guinea
Eq. Guinea
Greece
Greece
Grenada
Grenada
Greenland
Greenland
Guat.
Guat.
Guyana
Guyana
H.K.
H.K.
Honduras
Honduras
Croatia
Croatia
Hungary
Hungary
Indon.
Indon.
Is. Man
Is. Man
India
India
Ireland
Ireland
Iran
Iran
Iraq
Iraq
Iceland
Iceland
Israel
Israel
Italy
Italy
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jordan
Jordan
Japan
Japan
Kazak.
Kazak.
Kenya
Kenya
Kyrg.
Kyrg.
Camb.
Camb.
St. Kitts
St. Kitts
S. Korea
S. Korea
Kuwait
Kuwait
Laos
Laos
Leb.
Leb.
Liberia
Liberia
Libya
Libya
St. Lucia
St. Lucia
S. Lanka
S. Lanka
Lesotho
Lesotho
Lithu.
Lithu.
Lux.
Lux.
Latvia
Latvia
Macau
Macau
Mor.
Mor.
Monaco
Monaco
Moldova
Moldova
Mada.
Mada.
Mald.
Mald.
Mex.
Mex.
N. Mace.
N. Mace.
Mali
Mali
Malta
Malta
Myan.
Myan.
Monte.
Monte.
Mong.
Mong.
Moz.
Moz.
Mauritan.
Mauritan.
Mauritius
Mauritius
Malawi
Malawi
Malay.
Malay.
Nam.
Nam.
Niger
Niger
Nigeria
Nigeria
Nicar.
Nicar.
Netherl.
Netherl.
Norway
Norway
Nepal
Nepal
Nauru
Nauru
N.Z.
N.Z.
Oman
Oman
Pakistan
Pakistan
Panama
Panama
Peru
Peru
Phil.
Phil.
P. N. Guinea
P. N. Guinea
Poland
Poland
Portugal
Portugal
Par.
Par.
Qatar
Qatar
Rom.
Rom.
Russia
Russia
Rwanda
Rwanda
S. Arabia
S. Arabia
Sudan
Sudan
Senegal
Senegal
Sing.
Sing.
Solomon
Solomon
S. Leone
S. Leone
El Salv.
El Salv.
San Marino
San Marino
Serbia
Serbia
S. Sudan
S. Sudan
Sao Tome
Sao Tome
Surinm.
Surinm.
Slvk.
Slvk.
Slvn.
Slvn.
Sweden
Sweden
Eswatini
Eswatini
Togo
Togo
Thailand
Thailand
Tajik.
Tajik.
Timor-L.
Timor-L.
Tonga
Tonga
Tr. Tobago
Tr. Tobago
Tunisia
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkey
Taiwan
Taiwan
Uganda
Uganda
Ukraine
Ukraine
Uruguay
Uruguay
Kosovo
Kosovo
Uzbek.
Uzbek.
St. Vincent
St. Vincent
Venez.
Venez.
Vietnam
Vietnam
Yemen
Yemen
S. Africa
S. Africa
Zambia
Zambia
Zimb.
Zimb.
EU
EU
Canada
Canada
Jan. 6
Feb. 12
March 21
April 27
June 3
People covered: 80%
60
40
20
0

Note: “People covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker

Global Vaccination Campaign​


% of population
Countries and regionsDoses administeredEnough for % of peoplegiven 1+ dosefully vaccinatedDaily rate of doses administered
Global Total2,018,521,39736,356,920
Mainland China704,826,00025.219,729,000
U.S.297,720,92846.450.941.2999,474
EU258,867,57029.239.419.33,525,436
India223,727,6328.213.03.32,610,819
Brazil69,046,74316.422.210.7607,739
U.K.66,180,73149.559.539.6503,156
Germany52,779,76931.844.719.6774,418
France38,745,93029.941.718.1551,381
Italy36,195,57430.040.520.6486,195
Mexico31,811,93112.517.710.1586,011
Turkey29,793,47217.920.515.4180,051
Indonesia28,151,9735.36.44.1267,446
Spain27,607,24729.739.620.8335,655
Canada24,816,54533.151.24.7366,046
Russia24,000,0008.29.56.8200,000
Poland21,174,54627.937.320.3341,329
Chile19,108,97350.056.642.3155,790
Japan14,775,8655.98.73.0597,252
Morocco14,742,79220.725.216.2189,810
Saudi Arabia14,561,68721.4142,859
UAE13,154,46561.247.335.788,928
Argentina13,079,19514.622.66.5225,103
Colombia12,256,39012.215.19.31,599,915
Israel10,590,58758.560.356.72,428
Bangladesh9,992,8493.03.52.512,617
Netherlands9,934,31328.835.714.2160,954
South Korea8,962,7218.713.04.3539,023
Hungary8,959,57045.853.538.282,180
Romania8,042,57621.122.619.664,098
Pakistan7,953,5741.91.81.1260,438
Belgium6,984,49430.541.919.8102,468
Greece5,791,28027.035.020.1104,121
Portugal5,631,36527.436.618.267,767
Czech Republic5,540,40426.037.515.087,922
Sweden5,400,43626.136.815.569,947
Austria5,364,02330.342.518.785,140
Philippines5,180,7212.43.71.1156,771
Switzerland4,823,93328.256.520.572,906
Australia4,642,7039.1105,148
Serbia4,588,00032.936.429.548,956
Peru4,143,4346.28.73.894,014
Dominican Republic4,121,58419.930.19.775,420
Singapore4,047,65135.540.031.045,540
Thailand3,609,8822.63.61.683,665
Denmark3,557,42530.638.722.550,687
Malaysia3,212,8734.96.43.480,737
Cambodia3,180,9159.612.46.964,009
Iran3,141,5771.93.30.5162,440
Finland3,094,85428.046.19.940,598
Myanmar2,994,9002.83.42.3112,785
Kazakhstan2,964,8558.011.15.147,433
Uruguay2,942,33841.853.429.934,662
Norway2,786,71926.031.720.338,967
Egypt2,698,4111.42.40.376,385
Slovakia2,668,31324.532.716.353,697
Nepal2,666,6694.77.41.927,389
Qatar2,622,28546.954.039.825,908
Hong Kong2,502,61516.619.214.136,055
Azerbaijan2,418,08212.115.09.244,456
Mongolia2,388,06336.253.119.384,428
Ireland2,349,20723.735.012.463,187
Uzbekistan2,191,5253.34.264,671
Ecuador2,025,0465.98.73.044,220
Jordan1,904,2359.514.04.98,142
Croatia1,847,31422.732.313.228,855
El Salvador1,832,22814.217.311.138,996
Ethiopia1,813,7390.91.918,797
Sri Lanka1,797,4134.16.722,960
Bahrain1,755,57059.164.553.820,046
Lithuania1,677,01930.137.923.123,097
Nigeria1,637,0780.40.84,632
Bolivia1,568,7416.810.63.037,331
Ukraine1,525,0341.83.50.3343,061
Costa Rica1,457,80214.417.111.629,415
Bulgaria1,405,95210.111.88.412,024
Angola1,379,0532.33.51.175,432
Ghana1,228,2162.02.814,087
Lebanon1,181,9998.612.18.066,597
Kuwait1,120,00011.840,000
South Africa1,117,5691.41.90.859,524
Vietnam1,110,1110.61.1<0.110,749
Slovenia1,110,11026.833.221.614,766
Panama1,046,65512.415.79.114,170
Tunisia1,016,8604.35.92.723,347
Zimbabwe1,011,9733.44.52.320,996
Kenya969,5611.02.02,722
Albania780,34213.617.010.25,034
Latvia780,30220.826.415.316,068
Estonia726,24627.436.620.78,791
Belarus710,9223.84.62.922,577
Uganda681,2130.91.7<0.117,674
New Zealand668,1156.88.84.815,138
Afghanistan626,2900.81.30.46,850
Iraq614,4760.80.90.27,501
Laos582,7474.16.91.221,394
Cyprus570,69832.644.123.92,213
Taiwan562,0291.233,826
Guatemala561,9761.62.60.518,860
Ivory Coast543,1001.01.80.211,247
Malta534,63954.165.344.95,261
Senegal522,5751.62.80.42,311
Bhutan482,71632.464.843
Maldives480,93964.683.645.71,443
Moldova451,0068.413.23.610,577
Paraguay407,6442.84.61.111,650
Sudan402,1140.50.816,482
Mauritius400,80115.818.410,009
Rwanda400,0961.62.81.57,024
Mozambique394,3120.61.0101
Luxembourg364,90929.737.820.24,857
Malawi354,7770.91.71,785
Guinea339,1771.21.80.69,205
Oman323,2693.96.01.91,511
Togo311,9381.93.32,926
Iceland269,32437.751.727.73,513
North Macedonia264,5326.410.81.910,193
Honduras253,8321.32.112,853
Libya243,8911.93.76,867
Venezuela230,0000.40.811,000
Montenegro229,80318.421.915.06,256
Equatorial Guinea224,5038.310.95.62,727
Macau187,65213.817.710.04,020
Guyana176,79711.321.70.91,659
Jamaica174,2303.25.61,361
Nicaragua167,5001.32.682
Niger159,5250.30.74,202
Georgia155,5382.13.21.04,277
Curaçao149,44045.851.440.31,561
Botswana142,8643.06.03,043
Zambia140,8430.40.82,153
Somalia137,6181,784
Seychelles134,47570.073.466.7266
Barbados133,21423.226.719.81,434
Mali127,0420.30.54,226
Aruba111,57349.855.644.12,225
Jersey108,577791
Yemen104,0700.20.34,072
Isle of Man89,72452.872.133.4327
Comoros83,9074.89.6971
Namibia82,9071.72.90.41,482
Sierra Leone79,7620.50.90.1799
Cayman Islands79,56261.2611
Suriname78,5426.611.21,964
Gibraltar77,717114.3115.0113.6151
Trinidad and Tobago77,4222.85.52,062
Cameroon75,2150.10.22,597
Algeria75,0000.16,248
Tajikistan74,4030.40.8343
Kosovo74,0002.14.12,000
Belize73,0409.015.3950
Bermuda68,10454.156.716.4427
Guernsey67,926691
Fiji65,4193.77.3523
Timor-Leste63,7532.54.92,641
Liberia56,1440.61.2114
Brunei52,7755.73.20.12,707
Bahamas46,4006.111.11,309
St. Lucia45,98612.815.410.2232
Antigua and Barbuda44,23022.833.91,050
San Marino42,93563.164.362.870
Turkmenistan41,9930.40.60.2
Republic of the Congo38,2680.40.50.320
Micronesia38,18718.421.5677
Mauritania37,3310.50.80.21,707
Dominica37,15126.227.724.6243
Madagascar36,6400.10.13,682
Lesotho36,6370.91.81,091
Turks & Caicos36,17047.654.640.6914
Andorra35,91623.335.96.1359
Eswatini34,8971.63.11,618
Greenland33,79129.644.414.8651
Armenia33,5290.61.00.11,098
Faroe Islands33,22833.942.525.3359
Monaco30,02938.542.334.7137
Gambia29,1480.61.2226
Sint Maarten29,05534.640.528.6253
Grenada25,54411.715.97.5284
Cape Verde24,3822.23.959
Saint Kitts and Nevis24,29721.331.1594
DR Congo23,197<0.1<0.1900
Tonga21,63210.821.6875
Djibouti21,3571.01.2916
St. Vincent and the Grenadines20,4939.312.46.2225
Sao Tome and Principe18,8884.45.81,095
Gabon17,2720.40.50.3845
Anguilla14,44348.160.018.984
Benin12,9340.10.1281
Papua New Guinea11,5370.10.1385
Solomon Islands11,5360.91.8554
South Sudan9,744<0.10.1285
Nauru7,43828.657.2233
Samoa7,4111.83.7
St. Helena7,09159.159.458.8120
Guinea-Bissau5,8890.20.31
Falkland Islands4,40773.587.759.2202
Montserrat2,52225.227.223.313
Kyrgyzstan937<0.1<0.121
Bosnia and Herzegovina

U.S. Vaccinations: State by State​

Roughly half of the U.S. population has now received at least one dose, and states are flush with supply. Drugmakers have promised to deliver enough shots to fully vaccinate more than 300 million people in the U.S. by the end of June. That’s enough to cover everyone ages 12 and older—the entire population for which vaccines are currently approved.

Distribution in the U.S. is directed by the federal government. Pfizer and BioNTech’s vaccine, as well as Moderna’s shot both require two doses taken several weeks apart. J&J’s inoculation requires just a single dose.

Time to Deliver​

Vaccine makers pledge 700M doses for the U.S. by the end of July—enough to cover 400M people



Note: Targets are provided by the manufacturers and don’t always align with government forecasts for availability.
The introduction of J&J’s one-shot option should make it easier to vaccinate hard-to-reach populations. So far, 169 million Americans have received at least one dose of a vaccine—65.6% of the adult population. At least 137 million people have completed a vaccination regimen.

Vaccines Across America​

Across the U.S., enough doses have been administered to cover 46.4% of the population, and 81% of the delivered shots have been used
Population Covered% of Supply Used


Note: “Population covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Data added after Feb. 20 is from the CDC and includes doses administered by federal entities in state totals. Prior data from the Bloomberg Covid-19 Tracker. It can take several days for counts to be reported through the CDC database.

A new beginning​

It takes about two weeks after a final vaccine dose for immunity to fully develop. After that, masks and social distancing are no longer necessary, according to the latest CDC guidance issued on May 13. It’s a dramatic change in guidance that caught many by surprise. Life can begin to return to normal. Grandparents can spend time with their grandchildren again.

Unvaccinated people, including children, should still wear masks indoors, according to the CDC. Masks are still required by many businesses and state or local governments.

U.S. Vaccinations vs. Cases​

Covid rates have generally flattened or declined in states with the most vaccinations. Currently, 20 places have administered enough shots to cover at least 50% of the population.

New York (52.9% covered)

↑↓


Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
People covered: 75%
50
25
0


  • Seven-day average
Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
New cases per million: 1,500
1,000
500
0

Note: “People covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Vaccine data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Tracker. Cases data: Johns Hopkins University.
Younger, unvaccinated populations are increasingly viewed as key to heading off a future resurgence. Until recently, vaccine eligibility was mostly based on age, occupation, and underlying medical conditions. Now, across the U.S., anyone can sign up for a shot at their local pharmacy with little or no wait.

How State Vaccinations Stack Up​

Vermont leads all states, with enough vaccinations to cover 65.1% of its populations


↑↓

U.S.
U.S.
Miss.
Miss.
Vt.
Vt.
Alaska
Alaska
Ala.
Ala.
Ark.
Ark.
Ariz.
Ariz.
Calif.
Calif.
Colo.
Colo.
Conn.
Conn.
D.C.
D.C.
Del.
Del.
Fla.
Fla.
Ga.
Ga.
Hawaii
Hawaii
Iowa
Iowa
Idaho
Idaho
Ill.
Ill.
Ind.
Ind.
Kan.
Kan.
Ky.
Ky.
La.
La.
Mass.
Mass.
Md.
Md.
Maine
Maine
Mich.
Mich.
Minn.
Minn.
Mo.
Mo.
Mont.
Mont.
N.C.
N.C.
N.D.
N.D.
Neb.
Neb.
N.H.
N.H.
N.J.
N.J.
N.M.
N.M.
Nev.
Nev.
N.Y.
N.Y.
Ohio
Ohio
Okla.
Okla.
Ore.
Ore.
Pa.
Pa.
R.I.
R.I.
S.C.
S.C.
S.D.
S.D.
Tenn.
Tenn.
Texas
Texas
Utah
Utah
Va.
Va.
Wash.
Wash.
Wis.
Wis.
W.Va.
W.Va.
Wyo.
Wyo.
Jan. 6
Feb. 12
March 21
April 27
June 3
People covered: 70%
60
50
40
30
20
10
0

Note: Two doses are needed for full protection with the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, while the J&J shot requires a single dose. Data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker
After focusing first on hospitals and other institutional health-care settings, states expanded the number of places that offer the shots. Mass vaccination centers were created from sport stadiums, theme parks, convention halls and race tracks. Now those sites are beginning to close, as millions of doses are shipped each week directly to local pharmacies.

Tests for dosing, safety, and effectiveness are underway in young children and infants, with results expected later this year.


Tips and Feedback: Help us improve the Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker

The Path to Immunity in the U.S.​



In New York, the latest vaccination rate is 80,363 doses per day, on average. At this pace, it will take another 3 months to cover 75% of the population.


↑↓


  • Average daily rate estimate
Dec. 29
Feb. 6
March 17
April 25
June 3
Doses administered: 600K
400
200
0

Note: Vaccinating roughly 70% to 85% of a country or region’s population would enable a return to normalcy, according to top U.S. infectious disease doctor Anthony Fauci. Immunity calculations take into account the number of doses required and the current rate of administration for each vaccine type. Data are from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker.
 

Leongsam

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There was no vaccine for the Spanish flu and it came to an abrupt end after 20 months.

Covid will be exactly the same.

1622784909791.png
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
There was no vaccine for the Spanish flu and it came to an abrupt end after 20 months.

Covid will be exactly the same.

View attachment 112822

Phew. The stupid Opinions return.

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 299 tries, all failed

Sars COV-2 is nothing like H1N1 type A Spanish Flu Virus in terms of mortality nor transmissability

In drawing these analogies from past epidemics, however, we also need to recognize that one of the most widely reported facts from 1918–19, the death of 675,000 Americans, is based on limited, inconsistent, and even speculative reports. For health policy makers in 2021, understanding how deaths were counted in this earlier epidemic should provide a useful point of reference for educating the public about the increasing toll of COVID-19, with the goal of convincing people to take measures needed to gain control of the disease.

Unpacking The “Spanish Flu” Mortality Numbers​

Any mortality comparisons between these two pandemics in the United States, 2020 and 1918, must differentiate between totals and rates. The current US population, a little more than 330 million, is more than three times larger than the population in 1918, estimated at 105 million. The 675,000 deaths attributed to the influenza epidemic made up 0.64 percent of the total population, a little more than six in every thousand people. By contrast, the more than 500,000 deaths attributed to COVID-19 make up about 0.15 percent of the total population, or between one and two in every thousand people. If COVID-19 caused deaths at the same rate as the 1918 epidemic, the total would approach two million. Even the disturbing projections of more than to 600,000 deaths by July 1, 2021, would still remain below the rates recorded in the earlier epidemic.

It is important to recognize that we don’t know precisely how many people died of “Spanish flu.” Measuring influenza deaths is complicated because this disease often contributes to deaths attributed to other primary causes. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Pneumonia and Influenza Mortality Surveillance combines two causes into one reporting category. Most reports during the “Spanish flu” anticipated this practice by combining influenza and pneumonia deaths together, thus recognizing that the epidemic produced more deaths than were just attributed to influenza. We see a similar pattern today, as the actual count of pandemic deaths should include far more than those attributed specifically to COVID-19.

While we most commonly refer to it as the 1918 influenza, the estimates of death from that pandemic actually cover the last four months of 1918 and the first six months of 1919. Analysis of monthly death totals for 1918 and 1919 in the “registration states” (defined below) shows that the striking increases in all deaths were due almost entirely to increases in pneumonia and influenza deaths (exhibit 1). While the greatest increases occurred in fall 1918, the total number of deaths remained high for several months, as approximately one-quarter of epidemic deaths actually occurred in 1919.
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/covid-vaccine-tracker-global-distribution/

More Than 2.01 Billion Shots​

Given: Covid-19 Tracker​

In the U.S., 298 million doses have been administered
Updated: June 3, 2021, 4:59 PM EDT

The biggest vaccination campaign in history is underway. More than 2.01 billion doses have been administered across 176 countries, according to data collected by Bloomberg. The latest rate was roughly 36.4 million doses a day.
In the U.S., 298 million doses have been given so far. In the last week, an average of 999,474 doses per day were administered.

World Map of Vaccinations​

More than 2.01 billion doses have been administered—enough to fully vaccinate 13.2% of the global population

Enough doses have now been administered to fully vaccinate 13.2% of the global population—but the distribution has been lopsided. Countries and regions with the highest incomes are getting vaccinated more than 30 times faster than those with the lowest.

Uneven Access to Vaccines​


Least wealthy






Most wealthy

The wealthiest 27 places have 28.6% of the vaccinations…
Vaccines
India
Mainland China
U.S.

Hover for more comparisons
Population
India
Mainland China

…but 10.4% of the world's population
Note: Vaccine access calculations account for the number of doses needed for full protection; some vaccines require a two-dose regimen while others require just a single dose. Countries and regions are ordered by GDP per capita (PPP).

When will life return to normal?​

While the best vaccines are thought to be 95% effective, it takes a coordinated campaign to stop a pandemic. Anthony Fauci, the top infectious-disease official in the U.S., has said that vaccinating 70% to 85% of the U.S. population would enable a return to normalcy.

On a global scale, that’s a daunting level of vaccination. At the current pace of 36.4 million a day, it would take another year to achieve a high level of global immunity. The rate, however, is steadily increasing, and new vaccines by additional manufacturers are coming to market.

The Path to Immunity Around the World​



In the U.S., the latest vaccination rate is 999,474 doses per day, on average. At this pace, it will take another 6 months to cover 75% of the population.


↑↓


  • Average daily rate estimate
Dec. 29
Feb. 6
March 17
April 25
June 3
Doses administered: 5M
4
3
2
1
0

Note: Immunity calculations take into account the number of doses required and the current rate of administration for each vaccine type. The “daily rate estimate” is a seven-day trailing average; interpolation is used for jurisdictions with infrequent updates. *Coverage may exceed 100% in some places, as shots may be administered to non-residents. Data are from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker.
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Are we bending the curve yet?​

Israel was first to show that vaccinations were having a nationwide effect. The country has led the world in vaccinations, and by February more than 84% of people ages 70 and older had received two doses. Severe covid cases and deaths declined rapidly. A separate analysis in the U.K. showed similar results.

It’s now a life-and-death contest between vaccine and virus. New strains threaten renewed outbreaks. In the early stages of a campaign, the effect of vaccinations are often outweighed by other factors of transmissibility: virus mutations, seasonality, effectiveness of mask use and social distancing. In time, higher vaccination rates should limit the Covid-19 burden around the world.

Vaccinations vs. Cases​

Covid rates have generally flattened or declined where vaccination rates are highest. Currently, 13 places have administered enough shots to cover at least 40% of the population.

United States (46.4% covered)

↑↓


Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
People covered: 75%
50
25
0


  • Seven-day average
Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
New cases per million: 1,000
800
600
400
200
0

Note: “People covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Vaccine data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Tracker. Cases data: Johns Hopkins University.

Methodology and Analysis​

Since the start of the global vaccination campaign, countries have experienced unequal access to vaccines and varying degrees of efficiency in getting shots into people’s arms. Before March, few African nations had received a single shipment of shots. In the U.S., 89.7 doses have been administered for every 100 people.

Delivering billions of vaccines to stop the spread of Covid-19 worldwide will be one of the greatest logistical challenges ever undertaken.

Race to End the Pandemic​

Seychelles leads the world, with enough vaccinations to cover 70.0% of its population


↑↓

UAE
UAE
Seych.
Seych.
U.K.
U.K.
U.S.
U.S.
Aruba
Aruba
Afgh.
Afgh.
Angola
Angola
Alb.
Alb.
Andorra
Andorra
Argen.
Argen.
Armenia
Armenia
Antigua
Antigua
Aus.
Aus.
Austria
Austria
Azer.
Azer.
Belgium
Belgium
Benin
Benin
Bang.
Bang.
Bulg.
Bulg.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Baha.
Baha.
Belarus
Belarus
Belize
Belize
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bol.
Bol.
Brazil
Brazil
Barb.
Barb.
Brunei
Brunei
Bhutan
Bhutan
Bots.
Bots.
Switz.
Switz.
Chile
Chile
Mainland China
Mainland China
Iv. Coast
Iv. Coast
Camer.
Camer.
DR Congo
DR Congo
Rep. Congo
Rep. Congo
Col.
Col.
Comoros
Comoros
C. Verde
C. Verde
Co. Rica
Co. Rica
Curaçao
Curaçao
Cayman
Cayman
Cyprus
Cyprus
Cz. Rep.
Cz. Rep.
Germany
Germany
Dji.
Dji.
Domca.
Domca.
Den.
Den.
Dom. Rep.
Dom. Rep.
Alg.
Alg.
Ecuador
Ecuador
Egypt
Egypt
Spain
Spain
Est.
Est.
Ethio.
Ethio.
Finland
Finland
Fiji
Fiji
France
France
Micronesia
Micronesia
Gabon
Gabon
Georgia
Georgia
Ghana
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea
Gambia
Gambia
Guinea-Bis.
Guinea-Bis.
Eq. Guinea
Eq. Guinea
Greece
Greece
Grenada
Grenada
Greenland
Greenland
Guat.
Guat.
Guyana
Guyana
H.K.
H.K.
Honduras
Honduras
Croatia
Croatia
Hungary
Hungary
Indon.
Indon.
Is. Man
Is. Man
India
India
Ireland
Ireland
Iran
Iran
Iraq
Iraq
Iceland
Iceland
Israel
Israel
Italy
Italy
Jamaica
Jamaica
Jordan
Jordan
Japan
Japan
Kazak.
Kazak.
Kenya
Kenya
Kyrg.
Kyrg.
Camb.
Camb.
St. Kitts
St. Kitts
S. Korea
S. Korea
Kuwait
Kuwait
Laos
Laos
Leb.
Leb.
Liberia
Liberia
Libya
Libya
St. Lucia
St. Lucia
S. Lanka
S. Lanka
Lesotho
Lesotho
Lithu.
Lithu.
Lux.
Lux.
Latvia
Latvia
Macau
Macau
Mor.
Mor.
Monaco
Monaco
Moldova
Moldova
Mada.
Mada.
Mald.
Mald.
Mex.
Mex.
N. Mace.
N. Mace.
Mali
Mali
Malta
Malta
Myan.
Myan.
Monte.
Monte.
Mong.
Mong.
Moz.
Moz.
Mauritan.
Mauritan.
Mauritius
Mauritius
Malawi
Malawi
Malay.
Malay.
Nam.
Nam.
Niger
Niger
Nigeria
Nigeria
Nicar.
Nicar.
Netherl.
Netherl.
Norway
Norway
Nepal
Nepal
Nauru
Nauru
N.Z.
N.Z.
Oman
Oman
Pakistan
Pakistan
Panama
Panama
Peru
Peru
Phil.
Phil.
P. N. Guinea
P. N. Guinea
Poland
Poland
Portugal
Portugal
Par.
Par.
Qatar
Qatar
Rom.
Rom.
Russia
Russia
Rwanda
Rwanda
S. Arabia
S. Arabia
Sudan
Sudan
Senegal
Senegal
Sing.
Sing.
Solomon
Solomon
S. Leone
S. Leone
El Salv.
El Salv.
San Marino
San Marino
Serbia
Serbia
S. Sudan
S. Sudan
Sao Tome
Sao Tome
Surinm.
Surinm.
Slvk.
Slvk.
Slvn.
Slvn.
Sweden
Sweden
Eswatini
Eswatini
Togo
Togo
Thailand
Thailand
Tajik.
Tajik.
Timor-L.
Timor-L.
Tonga
Tonga
Tr. Tobago
Tr. Tobago
Tunisia
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkey
Taiwan
Taiwan
Uganda
Uganda
Ukraine
Ukraine
Uruguay
Uruguay
Kosovo
Kosovo
Uzbek.
Uzbek.
St. Vincent
St. Vincent
Venez.
Venez.
Vietnam
Vietnam
Yemen
Yemen
S. Africa
S. Africa
Zambia
Zambia
Zimb.
Zimb.
EU
EU
Canada
Canada
Jan. 6
Feb. 12
March 21
April 27
June 3
People covered: 80%
60
40
20
0

Note: “People covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker

Global Vaccination Campaign​


Countries and regionsDoses administeredEnough for % of peoplegiven 1+ dosefully vaccinatedDaily rate of doses administered
% of population
Global Total2,018,521,39736,356,920
Mainland China704,826,00025.219,729,000
U.S.297,720,92846.450.941.2999,474
EU258,867,57029.239.419.33,525,436
India223,727,6328.213.03.32,610,819
Brazil69,046,74316.422.210.7607,739
U.K.66,180,73149.559.539.6503,156
Germany52,779,76931.844.719.6774,418
France38,745,93029.941.718.1551,381
Italy36,195,57430.040.520.6486,195
Mexico31,811,93112.517.710.1586,011
Turkey29,793,47217.920.515.4180,051
Indonesia28,151,9735.36.44.1267,446
Spain27,607,24729.739.620.8335,655
Canada24,816,54533.151.24.7366,046
Russia24,000,0008.29.56.8200,000
Poland21,174,54627.937.320.3341,329
Chile19,108,97350.056.642.3155,790
Japan14,775,8655.98.73.0597,252
Morocco14,742,79220.725.216.2189,810
Saudi Arabia14,561,68721.4142,859
UAE13,154,46561.247.335.788,928
Argentina13,079,19514.622.66.5225,103
Colombia12,256,39012.215.19.31,599,915
Israel10,590,58758.560.356.72,428
Bangladesh9,992,8493.03.52.512,617
Netherlands9,934,31328.835.714.2160,954
South Korea8,962,7218.713.04.3539,023
Hungary8,959,57045.853.538.282,180
Romania8,042,57621.122.619.664,098
Pakistan7,953,5741.91.81.1260,438
Belgium6,984,49430.541.919.8102,468
Greece5,791,28027.035.020.1104,121
Portugal5,631,36527.436.618.267,767
Czech Republic5,540,40426.037.515.087,922
Sweden5,400,43626.136.815.569,947
Austria5,364,02330.342.518.785,140
Philippines5,180,7212.43.71.1156,771
Switzerland4,823,93328.256.520.572,906
Australia4,642,7039.1105,148
Serbia4,588,00032.936.429.548,956
Peru4,143,4346.28.73.894,014
Dominican Republic4,121,58419.930.19.775,420
Singapore4,047,65135.540.031.045,540
Thailand3,609,8822.63.61.683,665
Denmark3,557,42530.638.722.550,687
Malaysia3,212,8734.96.43.480,737
Cambodia3,180,9159.612.46.964,009
Iran3,141,5771.93.30.5162,440
Finland3,094,85428.046.19.940,598
Myanmar2,994,9002.83.42.3112,785
Kazakhstan2,964,8558.011.15.147,433
Uruguay2,942,33841.853.429.934,662
Norway2,786,71926.031.720.338,967
Egypt2,698,4111.42.40.376,385
Slovakia2,668,31324.532.716.353,697
Nepal2,666,6694.77.41.927,389
Qatar2,622,28546.954.039.825,908
Hong Kong2,502,61516.619.214.136,055
Azerbaijan2,418,08212.115.09.244,456
Mongolia2,388,06336.253.119.384,428
Ireland2,349,20723.735.012.463,187
Uzbekistan2,191,5253.34.264,671
Ecuador2,025,0465.98.73.044,220
Jordan1,904,2359.514.04.98,142
Croatia1,847,31422.732.313.228,855
El Salvador1,832,22814.217.311.138,996
Ethiopia1,813,7390.91.918,797
Sri Lanka1,797,4134.16.722,960
Bahrain1,755,57059.164.553.820,046
Lithuania1,677,01930.137.923.123,097
Nigeria1,637,0780.40.84,632
Bolivia1,568,7416.810.63.037,331
Ukraine1,525,0341.83.50.3343,061
Costa Rica1,457,80214.417.111.629,415
Bulgaria1,405,95210.111.88.412,024
Angola1,379,0532.33.51.175,432
Ghana1,228,2162.02.814,087
Lebanon1,181,9998.612.18.066,597
Kuwait1,120,00011.840,000
South Africa1,117,5691.41.90.859,524
Vietnam1,110,1110.61.1<0.110,749
Slovenia1,110,11026.833.221.614,766
Panama1,046,65512.415.79.114,170
Tunisia1,016,8604.35.92.723,347
Zimbabwe1,011,9733.44.52.320,996
Kenya969,5611.02.02,722
Albania780,34213.617.010.25,034
Latvia780,30220.826.415.316,068
Estonia726,24627.436.620.78,791
Belarus710,9223.84.62.922,577
Uganda681,2130.91.7<0.117,674
New Zealand668,1156.88.84.815,138
Afghanistan626,2900.81.30.46,850
Iraq614,4760.80.90.27,501
Laos582,7474.16.91.221,394
Cyprus570,69832.644.123.92,213
Taiwan562,0291.233,826
Guatemala561,9761.62.60.518,860
Ivory Coast543,1001.01.80.211,247
Malta534,63954.165.344.95,261
Senegal522,5751.62.80.42,311
Bhutan482,71632.464.843
Maldives480,93964.683.645.71,443
Moldova451,0068.413.23.610,577
Paraguay407,6442.84.61.111,650
Sudan402,1140.50.816,482
Mauritius400,80115.818.410,009
Rwanda400,0961.62.81.57,024
Mozambique394,3120.61.0101
Luxembourg364,90929.737.820.24,857
Malawi354,7770.91.71,785
Guinea339,1771.21.80.69,205
Oman323,2693.96.01.91,511
Togo311,9381.93.32,926
Iceland269,32437.751.727.73,513
North Macedonia264,5326.410.81.910,193
Honduras253,8321.32.112,853
Libya243,8911.93.76,867
Venezuela230,0000.40.811,000
Montenegro229,80318.421.915.06,256
Equatorial Guinea224,5038.310.95.62,727
Macau187,65213.817.710.04,020
Guyana176,79711.321.70.91,659
Jamaica174,2303.25.61,361
Nicaragua167,5001.32.682
Niger159,5250.30.74,202
Georgia155,5382.13.21.04,277
Curaçao149,44045.851.440.31,561
Botswana142,8643.06.03,043
Zambia140,8430.40.82,153
Somalia137,6181,784
Seychelles134,47570.073.466.7266
Barbados133,21423.226.719.81,434
Mali127,0420.30.54,226
Aruba111,57349.855.644.12,225
Jersey108,577791
Yemen104,0700.20.34,072
Isle of Man89,72452.872.133.4327
Comoros83,9074.89.6971
Namibia82,9071.72.90.41,482
Sierra Leone79,7620.50.90.1799
Cayman Islands79,56261.2611
Suriname78,5426.611.21,964
Gibraltar77,717114.3115.0113.6151
Trinidad and Tobago77,4222.85.52,062
Cameroon75,2150.10.22,597
Algeria75,0000.16,248
Tajikistan74,4030.40.8343
Kosovo74,0002.14.12,000
Belize73,0409.015.3950
Bermuda68,10454.156.716.4427
Guernsey67,926691
Fiji65,4193.77.3523
Timor-Leste63,7532.54.92,641
Liberia56,1440.61.2114
Brunei52,7755.73.20.12,707
Bahamas46,4006.111.11,309
St. Lucia45,98612.815.410.2232
Antigua and Barbuda44,23022.833.91,050
San Marino42,93563.164.362.870
Turkmenistan41,9930.40.60.2
Republic of the Congo38,2680.40.50.320
Micronesia38,18718.421.5677
Mauritania37,3310.50.80.21,707
Dominica37,15126.227.724.6243
Madagascar36,6400.10.13,682
Lesotho36,6370.91.81,091
Turks & Caicos36,17047.654.640.6914
Andorra35,91623.335.96.1359
Eswatini34,8971.63.11,618
Greenland33,79129.644.414.8651
Armenia33,5290.61.00.11,098
Faroe Islands33,22833.942.525.3359
Monaco30,02938.542.334.7137
Gambia29,1480.61.2226
Sint Maarten29,05534.640.528.6253
Grenada25,54411.715.97.5284
Cape Verde24,3822.23.959
Saint Kitts and Nevis24,29721.331.1594
DR Congo23,197<0.1<0.1900
Tonga21,63210.821.6875
Djibouti21,3571.01.2916
St. Vincent and the Grenadines20,4939.312.46.2225
Sao Tome and Principe18,8884.45.81,095
Gabon17,2720.40.50.3845
Anguilla14,44348.160.018.984
Benin12,9340.10.1281
Papua New Guinea11,5370.10.1385
Solomon Islands11,5360.91.8554
South Sudan9,744<0.10.1285
Nauru7,43828.657.2233
Samoa7,4111.83.7
St. Helena7,09159.159.458.8120
Guinea-Bissau5,8890.20.31
Falkland Islands4,40773.587.759.2202
Montserrat2,52225.227.223.313
Kyrgyzstan937<0.1<0.121
Bosnia and Herzegovina

U.S. Vaccinations: State by State​

Roughly half of the U.S. population has now received at least one dose, and states are flush with supply. Drugmakers have promised to deliver enough shots to fully vaccinate more than 300 million people in the U.S. by the end of June. That’s enough to cover everyone ages 12 and older—the entire population for which vaccines are currently approved.

Distribution in the U.S. is directed by the federal government. Pfizer and BioNTech’s vaccine, as well as Moderna’s shot both require two doses taken several weeks apart. J&J’s inoculation requires just a single dose.

Time to Deliver​

Vaccine makers pledge 700M doses for the U.S. by the end of July—enough to cover 400M people



Note: Targets are provided by the manufacturers and don’t always align with government forecasts for availability.
The introduction of J&J’s one-shot option should make it easier to vaccinate hard-to-reach populations. So far, 169 million Americans have received at least one dose of a vaccine—65.6% of the adult population. At least 137 million people have completed a vaccination regimen.

Vaccines Across America​

Across the U.S., enough doses have been administered to cover 46.4% of the population, and 81% of the delivered shots have been used
Population Covered% of Supply Used


Note: “Population covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Data added after Feb. 20 is from the CDC and includes doses administered by federal entities in state totals. Prior data from the Bloomberg Covid-19 Tracker. It can take several days for counts to be reported through the CDC database.

A new beginning​

It takes about two weeks after a final vaccine dose for immunity to fully develop. After that, masks and social distancing are no longer necessary, according to the latest CDC guidance issued on May 13. It’s a dramatic change in guidance that caught many by surprise. Life can begin to return to normal. Grandparents can spend time with their grandchildren again.

Unvaccinated people, including children, should still wear masks indoors, according to the CDC. Masks are still required by many businesses and state or local governments.

U.S. Vaccinations vs. Cases​

Covid rates have generally flattened or declined in states with the most vaccinations. Currently, 20 places have administered enough shots to cover at least 50% of the population.

New York (52.9% covered)

↑↓


Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
People covered: 75%
50
25
0


  • Seven-day average
Jan. 14
Feb. 18
March 25
April 29
June 3
New cases per million: 1,500
1,000
500
0

Note: “People covered” divides the doses administered for each vaccine type by the number of doses required for full vaccination. Vaccine data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Tracker. Cases data: Johns Hopkins University.
Younger, unvaccinated populations are increasingly viewed as key to heading off a future resurgence. Until recently, vaccine eligibility was mostly based on age, occupation, and underlying medical conditions. Now, across the U.S., anyone can sign up for a shot at their local pharmacy with little or no wait.

How State Vaccinations Stack Up​

Vermont leads all states, with enough vaccinations to cover 65.1% of its populations


↑↓

U.S.
U.S.
Miss.
Miss.
Vt.
Vt.
Alaska
Alaska
Ala.
Ala.
Ark.
Ark.
Ariz.
Ariz.
Calif.
Calif.
Colo.
Colo.
Conn.
Conn.
D.C.
D.C.
Del.
Del.
Fla.
Fla.
Ga.
Ga.
Hawaii
Hawaii
Iowa
Iowa
Idaho
Idaho
Ill.
Ill.
Ind.
Ind.
Kan.
Kan.
Ky.
Ky.
La.
La.
Mass.
Mass.
Md.
Md.
Maine
Maine
Mich.
Mich.
Minn.
Minn.
Mo.
Mo.
Mont.
Mont.
N.C.
N.C.
N.D.
N.D.
Neb.
Neb.
N.H.
N.H.
N.J.
N.J.
N.M.
N.M.
Nev.
Nev.
N.Y.
N.Y.
Ohio
Ohio
Okla.
Okla.
Ore.
Ore.
Pa.
Pa.
R.I.
R.I.
S.C.
S.C.
S.D.
S.D.
Tenn.
Tenn.
Texas
Texas
Utah
Utah
Va.
Va.
Wash.
Wash.
Wis.
Wis.
W.Va.
W.Va.
Wyo.
Wyo.
Jan. 6
Feb. 12
March 21
April 27
June 3
People covered: 70%
60
50
40
30
20
10
0

Note: Two doses are needed for full protection with the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, while the J&J shot requires a single dose. Data from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker
After focusing first on hospitals and other institutional health-care settings, states expanded the number of places that offer the shots. Mass vaccination centers were created from sport stadiums, theme parks, convention halls and race tracks. Now those sites are beginning to close, as millions of doses are shipped each week directly to local pharmacies.

Tests for dosing, safety, and effectiveness are underway in young children and infants, with results expected later this year.


Tips and Feedback: Help us improve the Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker

The Path to Immunity in the U.S.​



In New York, the latest vaccination rate is 80,363 doses per day, on average. At this pace, it will take another 3 months to cover 75% of the population.


↑↓


  • Average daily rate estimate
Dec. 29
Feb. 6
March 17
April 25
June 3
Doses administered: 600K
400
200
0

Note: Vaccinating roughly 70% to 85% of a country or region’s population would enable a return to normalcy, according to top U.S. infectious disease doctor Anthony Fauci. Immunity calculations take into account the number of doses required and the current rate of administration for each vaccine type. Data are from Bloomberg’s Covid-19 Vaccine Tracker.

I have been say this for a while now.

There are too many vaccinated so only fringe freaks would have any issue with the vaccine at this point.

2 Billion people is sacrosanct certainty
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
U know soon there will be 3 billions of peoples kenna jab then what excuse got?

1 out of every 2 is vaccine still make noise?

50% is a few months away, by year end

but the problem will be rich nations vs poor nations when it comes to vaccinations
 

dredd

Alfrescian
Loyal
Anti-vaxxers can make all kinds of noises, throw out all sorts of conspiracies and scare tactics... But at the end of the day, it is only a vaccine and it saves lives. The world is fast catching up on the numbers and once 80% is vaccinated and herd immunity kicks in, COVID19 will go away like smallpox and we can all live again.

Thankfully its a small number of losers that choose to ignore science, ignore risks.
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
Anti-vaxxers can make all kinds of noises, throw out all sorts of conspiracies and scare tactics... But at the end of the day, it is only a vaccine and it saves lives. The world is fast catching up on the numbers and once 80% is vaccinated and herd immunity kicks in, COVID19 will go away like smallpox and we can all live again.

Thankfully its a small number of losers that choose to ignore science, ignore risks.

there are already too many people for the anti-vaxxers to mount any viable opposition, now they all look very stupid
 

IMHDOCTOR

Alfrescian
Loyal
There was no vaccine for the Spanish flu and it came to an abrupt end after 20 months.

Covid will be exactly the same.

View attachment 112822

You are delusional. There are start contrasts to the events over 100 years ago and the present Pandemic humanity faces

We understand why you feel a need to sprout mistruths and conspiracy theories.

Its the only reality you know but it is not the true reality the rest of us as living with

To face the truth will cause you to confront your own pain.

kindly contact us for an assessment:

https://www.imh.com.sg/

Institute of Mental Health
http://www.imh.com.sg/
Buangkok Green Medical Park
10 Buangkok View
Singapore 539747
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
You are delusional. There are start contrasts to the events over 100 years ago and the present Pandemic humanity faces

We understand why you feel a need to sprout mistruths and conspiracy theories.

Its the only reality you know but it is not the true reality the rest of us as living with

To face the truth will cause you to confront your own pain.

kindly contact us for an assessment:

https://www.imh.com.sg/

Institute of Mental Health
http://www.imh.com.sg/
Buangkok Green Medical Park
10 Buangkok View
Singapore 539747

that is what I say.

Conspiracy theories
 
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