"Very few of those cases". Are your a doctor or in health sciences? You're obviously more informed than me, so please educate me. Either way can you cite that.
I'm a very healthy man, but just earlier this year spent 4 weeks in the hospital because a dozen hospitalists and a dozen surgeons couldn't diagnose my small-bowel obstruction caused by a perforated appendix. I sht you not, my wife suggested it as such after googling for hours... and days... and weeks... reading an NIH study about it. All the doctors blew us off - of course. I literally had a doctor ask me if I was 'sure - and just didn't remember' that I'd never had abdominal surgery after not finding scars because they couldn't find my appendix on a CT.
Because I tested + for covid that was their only pursuit... 'oh this is just ileus caused by covid, keep walking around and you'll be fine in a few days'... 4 weeks, appendectomy surgery, and 150k later here I am.
I'm sure I'm just an 'incidence' and my experience was 'rare'. My brother almost died in the same hospital 2 decades earlier after surgery - after an infection was seemingly overlooked for the better part of a day and lost most of his bowels.
PS Why mention by moniker? You have no clue what it means.