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progree

(12,479 posts)
18. I'm just curious about the percentage anyway
Mon Oct 13, 2025, 08:39 AM
Oct 13

Last edited Mon Oct 13, 2025, 01:22 PM - Edit history (6)

From the article:

"It is an extremely effective vaccine, so about 93% on the first dose and 97% effective on the second dose," she said.


So, if, for example, 40% of the Minnesota cases were vaccinated and 60% were not, that would still be 'most were unvaccinated', but it would be way outside the expected probability.

The Wisconsin statistic that all 36 cases were unvaccinated actually is a bit of an outlier in the other direction -- even with a 97% effectiveness rate. The chance of that statistically is 33%, with a 67% chance of 1 or more of the cases having been vaccinated.

Nobody here is arguing that MMR vaccinations are not very very effective. Some people are just interested in the numbers and egghead stuff like probablility and statistics, and some are not, and that's OK, DU is a diverse community. and we're a big tent. It happens.

Edited to add Actually, it's more than just an egghead exercise. If, for example, 40% of the 20 cases were vaccinated, it would be so far outside the expected probability that an investigation would probably be undertaken as to why. Bad batches? A mutation? Statistical analysis is used to find potential problems.

Edited to add after a couple of comments:

I have doubts about my statistical look at the Wisconsin cases. Although I've had about 4 university level statistical courses, and hundreds of hours of self-study, those were decades and decades ago. I'm also impressed by books like "Innumeracy" by John Allen Paulos, and by other counter-intuitive examples, where people can go astray.

In the Wisconsin cases, I'd add that even calling it "a bit of an outlier" was a bit too strong, even IF I happened to be right that there was only a 33% chance of that happening. To clarify, that's not way out there. Rolling a six-sided die will result in a "5" or a "6"   33% of the time, hardly a rare or noteworthy result,

I am very much unconvinced by arguments that 36 out of 36 cases being unvaccinated (and 0% vaccinated) is a "quite high" likelihood, while at the same time it is not unlikely or particular noteworthy if there was another state where 40% of their cases had been vaccinated.

I'm still interested in the percentage of the Minnesota cases, and I don't understand why anyone wouldn't be. Gathering information and studying as I go is part of my learning process, and if that makes me different and awful, well it happens.

And as I said, a highly unusual result may indicate a problem, e.g. bad vaccine batches or that a somewhat vaccine-resistant new mutation has developed. While a "who cares" attitude -- as long as vaccinated cases are still the minority -- may be OK for a message board, I would be horrified if that was the attitude among infectious disease statisticians and professionals.

In my first post in my thread, my motive was to save people time who might be curious about the percentage too -- "As for the Minnesota 20, the article does not give the percentage that were unvaccinated, to save people the trouble of looking for that statistic and not finding."

I'm so sorry that I tried to save people time, or naively assumed that anyone else besides me would care.

Recommendations

1 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

"Nation's new top vaccine advisory panel set to meet on new guidelinesA critical CDC vaccine panel is set for today, wei riversedge Oct 13 #1
"But Muh Freedumb!!!!" hatrack Oct 13 #2
The stupid runs deep in South Carolina. llmart Oct 13 #3
Good point about third world status. Prof. Toru Tanaka Oct 13 #10
The US and other developed countries hoarded vaccine during the Covid-19 pandemic dedl67 Oct 13 #17
I think Jared had something to do with that if I remember correctly. llmart Oct 13 #23
I think we passed the continuing stage mdbl Oct 13 #12
Give them the GOP Darwin Medal bucolic_frolic Oct 13 #4
Sigh. irisblue Oct 13 #5
Hey, why bother quarantining? These nuts will now AllyCat Oct 13 #6
"Minnesota's measles case count jumps to 20, with most unvaccinated children", CBS, 10/12/25 progree Oct 13 #7
I feel that 'most' says enough. (n/t) OldBaldy1701E Oct 13 #8
I'm just curious about the percentage anyway progree Oct 13 #18
That leaves out that the unvaccinated are clustered IbogaProject Oct 13 #21
I don't understand why you are making up numbers. yardwork Oct 13 #22
Wait till parents mgardener Oct 13 #9
Good. There is nothing like having a kid unexpectedly home to inconvenience parents Warpy Oct 13 #11
Only when it starts to affect ordinary, regular folks will they be upset. riversedge Oct 13 #16
RFK Jr asks "We're any of the boys with measles circumcised?" Gimpyknee Oct 13 #13
The Shame of the Kennedys... GiqueCee Oct 13 #14
Completely avoidable. Hope none of them die or have horrible lasting effects. Scrivener7 Oct 13 #15
Back when I was a child, before the vaccine... llmart Oct 13 #24
I'm so sorry. Can you imagine voluntarily bringing that on your children? Scrivener7 Oct 13 #29
No, I can't llmart Oct 13 #31
I narrowly missed all of that. My brother talks about the kids lining up at school for the Scrivener7 Oct 13 #32
You're lucky to have gotten them. llmart Oct 13 #33
Weird thing: I had a bad case of chicken pox in my twenties. I had to get my titers Scrivener7 Oct 13 #34
Remember when the right came unglued over COVID lockdowns? Where is their anger now? nt Hotler Oct 13 #19
I'm an old man, so my health isn't much of an issue, anymore. Paladin Oct 13 #20
Not good. ck4829 Oct 13 #25
Gross, stay away from filthy diseased unvaxed magats- they don't care about their own health let alone others Blues Heron Oct 13 #26
Make measles great again. LisaL Oct 13 #27
Where I grew up they called such people "'dumb asses". They were smarter than they sounded. twodogsbarking Oct 13 #28
They wouldn't let their child be the stinky kid in class but they're OK w/ their child being the disease vector kid. Solly Mack Oct 13 #30
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