@jimmaxcricket Acknowledges that they weren’t ready for the pressure, but no comment that they also got things wrong tactically? I think the latter issue was far bigger than the former
Measles vaccines save millions of lives each year.
Measles used to be an extremely common disease. Just sixty years ago, over 90% of children would have been infected by it, and of those who developed symptoms, around a quarter would be hospitalized.
The US alone had around three to four million cases annually, leading to tens of thousands of hospitalizations and hundreds of deaths each year.
However, in 1963, John Enders developed the first effective measles vaccine. Vaccination efforts ramped up rapidly in richer countries, and in the 1970s and 1980s, they were scaled up worldwide.
In just the last fifty years, it’s estimated that measles vaccinations have prevented over *90 million* deaths worldwide.
Two to three million people would die from measles every year without them. This means these vaccines are likely the most life-saving ones currently in use.
@MrTbloke@Espanaprofundo@cryptoridoos@pharoahnfl More assumptions from you?
You’re hanging your hat on one example, while dismissing those that prove you wrong
Claiming that AFL isn’t a highly skilful sport makes it hard to take your comments seriously. It’s way beyond sports like NRL