I added a link above. The ONS is the UK’s national statistics agency. This is not a peer-reviewed paper but a report they published. (I find these reports to be mixed in quality).
In the Nature paper, they get 2.3% with symptoms overall. But they estimate that 30 yos are less likely than older cohorts to have symptoms at 56 days and so you could adjust down a bit. (Women are also at higher risk according to this study).
I added a link above. The ONS is the UK’s national statistics agency. This is not a peer-reviewed paper but a report they published. (I find these reports to be mixed in quality).
In the Nature paper, they get 2.3% with symptoms overall. But they estimate that 30 yos are less likely than older cohorts to have symptoms at 56 days and so you could adjust down a bit. (Women are also at higher risk according to this study).
Oops, thought that was a top-level reply to me when I clicked on it, rather than a reply to Adam. Sorry. Makes more sense in context.