Actually, I think that currently they are mostly underestimates - many countries are collecting death data haphazardly, and excess death counts indicate much higher numbers. It's not unlikely that, when we develop a more comprehensive estimate, the IFR will go up a lot
Again, that list is wildly disingenuous. Several acknowledged (by the authors themselves!) overestimates, several that are higher than 0.26%, two that are very trivially explained by age differences, etc. Slovenia is the one reliable estimate you've got there
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And as a lower bound, as I've mentioned, it's probably a bit of an underestimate. So while 0.26% might not be entirely impossible, there's no doubt (especially given the population demographics) that it's an outlier
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(Oh, sorry, forgot to mention that two of those examples - CEBM and CDC - are "expert opinion" and have been widely questioned. CEBM has also now increased their estimate three times as new evidence emerges)
End of conversation
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Of seroprevalence
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