Except, VT didn't look bad in that earlier time. Clearly, VT took enough other mitigation measures during the earlier time so that they never looked bad. They only look as "bad" now because the same group of people that didn't take those earlier measures serious are also the ones not taking them serious now and not getting vaccinated. So, yes, for the group of people that don't want to do anything it's as bad now as it was before. For the rest, not so much. The low raw totals because they did so well earlier are making the shape look like it's as bad. That's a poor reading, because it's never been bad in VT at all.Vermont looks bad now compared to Vermont earlier in the pandemic without any vaccinations. That's the point. Looking at Vermont or Israel (76.1% of the population fully vaccinated, 82.6% one shot, all Pfizer), there is no evidence that high vaccination rates lead to low levels of community transmission. Yet that is the justification being used to force people to get vaccinated, to protect others.
So, imagine that, vaccination does to something. The "as bad as before" is the unvaccinated people. We're still not at enough vaccinated to have a population level cure.Let me introduce you to Vermont's COVID dashboard, which is very easy to navigate and shows you almost all the data you might want:
COVID-19 Data | Vermont Department of Health
Find up-to-date information on the statewide community level, hospitalizations, emergency visits, wastewater monitoring, case counts, outbreaks, vaccination rates, and more. Data and reports are updated on Wednesdays.www.healthvermont.gov
You can easily flip back and forth between the disease activity and vaccination screens. What you will see is an almost exact inverse correlation between which age brackets have the lowest vaccination rates and the highest case loads, mainly the 20-29 year old demographic, with a vaccination rate stubbornly stuck in the 60% range. Note that the completely unvaccinated 0-9 age group has far lower numbers than even some of the adult groups. The difference for them? Well, some are too young to really have any significant interactions outside the house, but for those in school, most (if not all) schools maintain strong mitigation strategies, like mandatory masking and distancing. Hmm, how about that, maybe mitigation strategies can actually have the desired result? Nah, screw that, let's just give up, learn to live with COVID, since doing hard but necessary things these days has become un-'Merican... or worse, SOCIALIST!!!!
If you also look under the "COVID-19 Data Summary" tab, it allows you to download a periodic update of even more data not readily apparent on the dashboard. According to the latest report from 10 September, of fully vaccinated Vermonters, only 0.4% have suffered a breakthrough infection, and of this 0.4%, only 2.7% have required hospitalization and 0.9% have died. So, in Vermont, if fully vaccinated, you have only a 0.01% chance of hospitalization, and a 0.004% chance of dying from COVID-19. I'll take those odds and policies that move people towards those odds.
The VT CDC graph is NOT proof that vaccination doesn't do anything, it's proof that VT took COVID seriously and it's population handled it well earlier in the pandemic. Combined with it's overall lack of population allowing the part that's not handling it well to have an over representation in the shape.