Lots of Vaccinated, Boosted San Diegans Die from COVID

San Diego County in California poses a dilemma for the popular narrative that, although the COVID-19 shots may not be prevent infection with the SARS-CoV-2 virus and its variants, the shots will prevent people from developing serious symptoms of COVID and being hospitalized for the disease or dying from it. San Diego confirms in the starkest manner a fact, which has been known for at least a year now, and that is that the narrative is patently false.1
Cases of Fully Vaccinated and Boosted People Becoming Severely Ill from COVID Get Little Attention
There are countless cases in the United States and around the world of fully vaccinated individuals testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 and coming down with severe COVID that requires hospitalization and, then, dying. These cases, however, have not received much publicity from governments or the media, so the public believes that COVID shots at least offer protection from the worst cases scenario of contracting SARS-CoV-2 and dying from it.2 3 4 5
41 Percent of People in San Diego County Who Recently Died of COVID Were Fully Vaccinated and Boosted
But San Diego County offers a kind of case study that reveals a significant percentage of COVID hospitalizations and deaths are in fully vaccinated and boosted people. According to the California Health and Human Services Agency (CalHHS), during May-July 2022, 41 percent of the COVID deaths that occurred in San Diego County—the second largest county in California, with a population of nearly 3.3 million—were among fully vaccinated and boosted people.1 6 7
There was a total of 104,288 cases of SARS-CoV-2 infections in San Diego County from May to July. Of these cases, 45,660 (44 percent) involved fully vaccinated and boosted people, 22,662 involved fully vaccinated people and 35,966 (34 percent) involved people who were not fully vaccinated, including individuals with only one dose of the two-dose series, no doses, or unknown vaccination status.1
Of the 104,288 cases, there was a total of 2,417 hospitalizations. Of these hospitalizations, 1,037 (43 percent) involved fully vaccinated and boosted people, 594 (25 percent) involved fully vaccinated people and 786 (33 percent) involved people who were not fully vaccinated, including individuals with only one dose of the two-dose series, no doses, or unknown vaccination status.1
Of the 104,288 cases, there was a total of 88 deaths. Of these deaths, 36 (41 percent) involved fully vaccinated and boosted people, 23 (26 percent) involved fully vaccinated people and 29 (33 percent) involved people who were not fully vaccinated, including individuals with only one dose of the two-dose series, no doses, or unknown vaccination status.1
San Diego County Has a Very High Vaccination Rate
It’s worth noting that San Diego County does have a very high COVID vaccination rate. Some 2.6 million (79.4 percent) of San Diegans are fully vaccinated, while more than 1.4 million (61 percent) San Diegans are fully vaccinated and boosted. Some might point out that the percentages of fully vaccinated and boosted individuals, who were hospitalized for COVID or died of COVID, are still way below the percentage of those fully vaccinated and boosted, and that this suggests the vaccines had a positive impact. But that strange bit of reasoning misses the point entirely.8
The point is that out of the total 104,288 COVID cases, more than 68,000 San Diegans who dutifully got their shots became infected with SARS-CoV-2 (about 65 percent) and out of 2,417 COVID hospitalizations, approximately 1,600 of them (about 66 percent) involved fully vaccinated or fully vaccinated and boosted people. And between 41 and 67 percent of the 88 COVID deaths occurred in people who were either fully vaccinated or fully vaccinated and boosted.
The facts do not gel with the popular narrative.
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