Example of why what you said isn't correct. If pregnancies went up 100000000000000% from last year you would see miscarriages go up from last year too even if miscarriages were 1% you'd get 1% of that huge number which would be higher than the 1% from the previous year.
Example of why what you said isn't correct. If pregnancies went up 100000000000000% from last year you would see miscarriages go up from last year too even if miscarriages were 1% you'd get 1% of that huge number which would be higher than the 1% from the previous year.
The percentage would not go up. The article uses the percentage. "366% in 6 weeks". Would the percentage go up 366% without the vaccine?
Using what you said 1% is still 1%. No matter what the actual number is.
1% of 100000 (this year) is more than 1% of 100 (previous year).
That would make the 1% going up by 1000% from the previous year.