You are arguing from ignorance. As I said, Gregory Poland has attributed the increase in the rate of deaths per reported measles cases to "the increased incidence of measles infection in infants and adults relative to children older than 1 year of age." https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1994.00420160048006 …https://twitter.com/GidMK/status/1167191077146677248 …
Not at all. The reference was obviously quite specific, to a 1990 outbreak that at the time was the biggest and most fatal one since the 70s. In fact, modern outbreaks have shown that this prediction is not a rule, and may have at that point been an artifact of chance
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A more recent reference, for example, is the 2017/18 outbreaks which had case mortality rates between 1 and 2, or roughly 0.2% https://www.who.int/csr/don/06-may-2019-measles-euro/en/ …
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