NOTE: Follow-up research on the phenomenon mentioned below can be found here.
Data from the CDC suggest that a COVID jab can keep you out of the hospital, but only for about 4 months. By Day 120 after a booster, the “vaccine effectiveness” (VE) in adults has already dropped below 40%:
This indicates that, if you do not make it back for another booster inside of 6 months, you lose protection. But notice how it is that Hungary largely gave up on COVID jabs by 4 Jun 2022 (exactly 1 month before Independence Day in the USA), so that, over the next 6 months, they wouldn’t even give a jab to 2 people in 100:
In contrast, Vietnam jabbed more than 43 people out of every 100 in the 6 months from 4 Jun 2022 to 4 Dec 2022. The USA jabbed over 10 times as many people as Hungary did.
But if COVID jabs keep you out of the hospital, then you would expect for there to be more ICU admissions in Hungary beyond the 6-month mark — when the CDC admits that the COVID jabs have lost most of their claimed “effectiveness.”
But look at their ICU admissions 7 months after “giving up” on the COVID jab:
Not even 2 weekly ICU admissions per million citizens! But critics and detractors may say: “Yeah, they had a low rate. But what about after that? I’ll bet the rate rose after that!”
And here is the answer to those critics:
Less than 1 ICU admission per million (only 1 ICU admission for every 10 million). Other nations who didn’t give up on COVID jabs as early as Hungary, like Germany and Spain, had ICU admission rates that were over 20 times as high as that.
Evidence suggests that giving up on the COVID jab can lead to a low rate of ICU admission, as has happened in Hungary.
I bet msm won’t look into this.