I may screw this up, but efficacy describes how effective the vaccine was in the trial vs the control group. So if each group had an equal number of people, and 100 people in the control group got sick, but only 5 people who received the vaccine group got sick, the efficacy rate would be 95%.
The hope, of course, is that the vaccine's effectiveness (how well it does at preventing covid) is close to the efficacy, but it's very hard to know for sure. That's why it's best to have the trials spread out among demographics and even locations, to better try and identify what may cause the vaccine to be more or less effective.
The hope, of course, is that the vaccine's effectiveness (how well it does at preventing covid) is close to the efficacy, but it's very hard to know for sure. That's why it's best to have the trials spread out among demographics and even locations, to better try and identify what may cause the vaccine to be more or less effective.