The numbers showed that the hospitalisation rate for the Omicron wave was less than the Delta wave. The question was whether this was due to:Good post. But I never said that vaccination is not the cause. Of course, vaccination has a very large part to do with the fact that infections are milder (and btw, also compared to delta, whether vaccinated or not), which I just pointed out. The numbers were already VERY clear last week and it was apparent that further studies would only confirm this. You can also simply compare the figures directly yourself and don't have to wait every time for "studies" that ultimately only evaluate exactly these numbers, that are already available for days or even weeks. It really is true that the data is available to everyone way before "studies" (which are often only evaluations of already known data) come out, but many people no longer have the imagination (or they're just dumb) to look at the numbers themselves.
I'm perfectly comfortable saying it again, and you're welcome to quote me on that next year: The pandemic ends in 2022. A regularly modified vaccination that protects against flu and coronaviruses at the same time will be the gold standard against seasonal outbreaks.
1.) More of the Omicron infections being re-infections, which are expected to be milder due to existing immunity
2.) Increased immunity in the population due vaccination/infections
or:
3.) Omicron being "inherently" milder
At a population level, the first 2 causes will lead to better outcomes, without lowering the risk that each individual faces.