Agreed, and if for example Caudwell and his family all happened to live next to a large herd of deer all carrying Lyme disease ticks, that could increase their Lyme risk. But for the average family of 11, it's still around a 38 billion to 1 chance that they would all have Borrelia.
And again, if we look at the story posted by
@mattie at the beginning of this thread, where he says:
What are the chances of these random, genetically unrelated individuals all having Borrelia? Again, if we use the 10.9% prevalence figure for the prevalence in a Lyme endemic area (and these journalists and TV personalities may not even live in an endemic area), and just as a guess we can say there were 7 people in total who were tested (
@mattie does not state the exact number), the chances of them all having Lyme are:
(10.9/100)^7 = 0.00000018 = 5 million to 1 against. That is to say, it is extremely improbable that all these journalists and TV personalities would all be positive for Lyme.
Starting to see a pattern here with Armin's tests?