@marvin
In year 1998 there were 5,544,059 JWs. You do the math and tell readers what a ratio of 3848-to-1 gives us for the year 1998 alone.
1/3848 = 0.00025987525987526, or 0.26/1000 - I think we all get that you believe 0.26/1000 JW's will die of anemia on an annual basis.
In lil'ole UK that would be in the region of 300+ people every year. I think we would have noticed. An Economist article this year on the blood doctrine had to refer back to a 2007 death for a relevant example http://www.economist.com/blogs/erasmus/2013/08/jehovahs-witnesses-and-blood - now why would the journalist trawl back to 2007 to get an example if there were hundreds of them occuring every year?
The problem marvin is not the maths to arrive at your chosen answer once you have decided the values for all the variables. The problem is how you got to those values.
I don't accept your extrapolation is valid, nor the way you are now presenting it is particularly forthright. You presenting your extrapolations as 'hard'.
The Beliaev study gives us hard numbers saying over a 10-year period we have <speculation alert------> 33 statistical deaths among a community that averaged <Beliaev doesn't mention this figure------> 12,700 members annually over the same 10-year period. <evidently-----> Hence we have 3.3 deaths per year for 12,700 individuals per year. That’s an extrapolated ratio of 3848-to-1 annually. These are the <semi-----> hard numbers. These numbers are not a rate. They are hard. (not as hard as you would like Marvin - maybe you need a blood tranfusion :-)
The hard numbers are 19 dead JW's in 4 hospitals over a 10 year period. The JW's and the control group were selected after the fact by Beliaev.
The rest is your speculative extrapolation on top of your assumptions.
eg - average number of JW's 12,700 - did you account for unbaptized publishers under the age of 15 being in the official JW figures, but which the Beliaev study would exclude, for example.
I'm not saying your maths is wrong, or that your assumptions are not possible. Just that when I take a different approach I get a different answer, and there is a 13x difference in outcomes between our approaches.
Just as I cannot get away from your maths, you cannot get away from mine., but thats not really the point.
Have a nice day, and keep up the good work!
@SBF - 13,700 over 5 decades globally - see page 4 of the thread :-)