Internetolocutor
Internetolocutor t1_jae1vx4 wrote
Reply to comment by SunnyDayInPoland in [OC] Top 20 Countries with the Most Significant Life Expectancy Differences Between Males and Females - revised from a prior post by kwantitative
Newsflash, yes, I know, but this is a sex-based plot and feminism is supposed to be about equality of the sexes.
As an aside, I don't think I've heard someone say newsflash since those sassy teens in 90s TV shows.
Internetolocutor t1_jab6km7 wrote
Reply to [OC] Top 20 Countries with the Most Significant Life Expectancy Differences Between Males and Females - revised from a prior post by kwantitative
It is interesting why feminists talk about the wage gap a lot, but not the lifespan gap. Can't think why...
Internetolocutor t1_j19int7 wrote
Reply to comment by watabadidea in Physical activity before COVID-19 infection is associated with less severe outcomes. In a study of 194,191 adults with COVID-19, those who were consistently inactive were 191% more likely to be hospitalized and 391% more likely to die than those who were consistently active. by glawgii
I had a previous Reddit account before I switched phones I forgot my details and I saw people mention things like this but the difference is that they would often say the vaccine is much worse not just in kids but also young adults and the reality is that it wasn't true. The vaccine is only worse in young men for myocarditis, marginally. But it's much better for things like pericarditis, heart failure and survival outcomes. On balance the vaccine is better, but how much better obviously decreases as you got younger and healthier. But it always remained better.
If people just said that in young, healthy adults, it isn't quite as useful as in older ones therefore the vaccine is not as much of an imperative then that would be fine. The problem is that they usually went further than that and said therefore don't take the vaccine.
Internetolocutor t1_j18mkbe wrote
Reply to comment by itguy18 in Physical activity before COVID-19 infection is associated with less severe outcomes. In a study of 194,191 adults with COVID-19, those who were consistently inactive were 191% more likely to be hospitalized and 391% more likely to die than those who were consistently active. by glawgii
Can you show me someone who is shocked?
Internetolocutor t1_jdpjuwd wrote
Reply to Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
Kill her when you're 64?