COVID is almost twice as deadly as flu. No need to die from either - GET YOUR SHOTS

For the study, published in the International
Journal of Infectious Diseases, Korean researchers drew on data from
national health insurance claims to compare 30-day all-cause mortality among
more than 15 million people diagnosed as having COVID or influenza from July
2022 to December 2023.
76% higher odds of death by 30 days for COVID
A COVID diagnosis was associated with 76% higher odds of
death within 30 days than influenza. Overall, 0.20% of patients with COVID
died, compared with 0.016% of those with influenza, a roughly 12.5-fold
difference in crude mortality. Among hospitalized patients, COVID was
linked to a substantially greater risk of death in those receiving mechanical
ventilation (1.88-fold higher).
The mortality gap was especially pronounced among adults aged 18 to 64 years (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 2.93), hospitalized patients (aOR, 2.55), and those who had a heart attack (aOR, 2.24), chronic lung disease (aOR, 1.94), or diabetes (aOR, 1.81). Adults aged 65 and older also had increased risk, though the relative odds were lower than those of the 18- to 40-year cohort (aOR, 1.95).
One possible explanation for the age-related differences,
note the authors, is Korea’s prioritization of COVID vaccines for older adults
and those in high-risk groups. They also cite differences in coverage between
the two vaccines and differences in vaccine uptake as contributing factors.
Among adults 65 and older, uptake for influenza vaccines was 82.5% in 2023-24
but only 45% for COVID.
“This disparity may have contributed to the higher mortality
observed for COVID-19,” the researchers write. “Collectively, these findings
highlight the critical role of vaccination coverage in shaping mortality
patterns and underscore the need for targeted strategies to improve uptake
among younger populations.”