How fractions can give a better understanding of what COVID-19 data shows about vaccinations - Action News
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SaskatchewanAnalysis

How fractions can give a better understanding of what COVID-19 data shows about vaccinations

How the province is displaying and sharing information can cause people to misunderstand what they're seeing.

Experts say it remains important to get a vaccine

The New Brunswick Pharmacists' Association says the demand for COVID-19 vaccinations in the province is slowing down. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

CBC hasbeen hearing some common questions about COVID-19 numbers from listeners and readers.

Callers and emailers have asked for help understanding whyCOVID-19 data released by the province seems to be showing one thing, when they're being told another.

The requests have often come in the form of twoquestions:

  1. Why are the numbersof vaccinated people contracting COVID-19 similar or comparable to the number of unvaccinated or partially vaccinated people getting COVID-19?
  2. If the numbers are similar, what is the point of getting the vaccine?

These two questions arebased around a misunderstanding.

An expertthatCBC News spoke withsaidit's not necessarily the individuals fault, rather it's a failure in how information is being presented to them.

Take a look at thisgraphic shared by the Saskatchewan Health Authority. It showsthe 131 new cases reported on Wednesday.

The graphic breaks down the 131 cases to show 103 were not vaccinated, 10 were partially vaccinated and 18 were fully vaccinated.

The number of fully vaccinated people makes up a much smaller chunk of the cases reported on Wednesday, but it's not insignificant.

Seeingthe similarity in new case numbers for those who are vaccinated and those who are partially vaccinated can also give a misleading impression.

Two experts said that just looking at the totals by themselves is the wrong way of thinking about this.

Andrew Cameron, a professor of biology at the University of Regina, and NazeemMuhajarine, aprofessor of epidemiology atthe University of Saskatchewan, both said it's better to think of those numbers as fractions.

"We always need to look at look at a person as part of a group, as a part of a population," said Muhajarine.

That means treating the numbers shared on a daily basis as the numerator the number above the line in a fraction with the population of unvaccinated, partiallyvaccinated or fully vaccinatedas thedenominator the number below the line in a fraction.

There are hundreds of thousands morepeople vaccinated than unvaccinated in Saskatchewan.

As of Wednesday, there were approximately 402,000 unvaccinated people (this includes kids under 12 who are not eligible),93,000 partially vaccinated people who've only received their first dose and678,000 fully vaccinated people.

Lets put these numbers into fractions, using Wednesday's new case counts.

For unvaccinated people, there were 103 cases/402,000people. For partially vaccinated, there were 10 cases/93,000 people. For fully vaccinated people, there were 18 cases/678,000 people.

We can then use these fractions to show a rate of how many people are being infected per capita in each group:

  • Unvaccinated -103 cases/402,000 people = approximately 26 cases per 100,000 people.
  • Partially vaccinated -10 cases/93,000 people =approximately 11 cases per 100,000 people.
  • Fully vaccinated -18 cases/678,000 people = approximately 3cases per 100,000

Presenting these numbers as part offractions like this canbetter illustrate why the figuresaren't actually comparable, the experts said.

It can also help people understand why it's very important to get vaccinated.

"What we're seeing is that the infections are concentrated in the unvaccinated individuals in the province," said Cameron.

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Muhajarine and Cameron saidit's good that the province is proactively releasing information that provides a better understanding of the state of COVID-19 in Saskatchewan.

But Muhajarine also went a step further. He encouraged the province to provide a breakdown of the unvaccinated that shows the number of people who are contracting COVID-19 but areineligible to get the vaccine.

"That is more transparent, more helpful and more able to communicate the importance of getting a vaccine for those who are eligible and not getting the vaccine," Muhajarine said.

Currently anyone under the age of 12 is not able to receive a dose.

Approximately 155,000 people fall into that category, according to the province's population estimates.

Cameron and Muhajarinebothemphasized that vaccines don't provide immunity to COVID-19, but they do provide significant protection against contracting the virus, curbingthe worst symptoms of COVID and limiting the spread.

"[A vaccinated person is a]very hard barrier for that virus to pass through because it's harder for the virus to infect in the first place and then it's harder for the virus to jump to the next person," said Cameron.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said in one place that there are approximately 247,000 unvaccinated people in Saskatchewan. In fact, there are approximately 402,000, which includes children under 12, as of Wednesday.
    Aug 19, 2021 1:29 PM CT