I have a very visceral and straightforward approach to vaccination. I mean, I had 50 people struggling for their lives in the intensive care unit. And this wasn't a case of, you know, you go on the ventilator for two days and you get better. This was, by and large, three weeks of daily battle to keep people alive. These were the sickest people I've ever seen in my life as a group, and it's a small miracle that we only lost 20% of them. Had they been older, had they been in their fifties or sixties, we probably would have had a 60% mortality rate.
The fact that you can have a vaccination and just avoid the problem—I don't know if I'm allowed to say it's a no-brainer, but it's not a difficult decision, as far as I'm concerned, if you accept that the vaccine is very safe and very effective. Most of these people would have told you that their risk is very low and that they're young and healthy—“How could I get that sick?” But they were that sick. So I think it's a very clear-cut kind of case.