It is relative.
In epidemiology, prevalence is the proportion of a particular population affected by a medical condition at a specific time.
In daily life, however, prevalence indicates the presence of a particular circumstance, situation, or condition based on what we experience.
What is prevalent is a function of our historical perspective and the time we apply.
Historical perspective is the bias we carry for learning about the world around us. How fixated we are about the understanding we have developed determines the prevalence of things (or absence) we witness.
The closer it is to our biases, we are quick to echo that our experience is prevalent! We have seen it ourselves. We see it with others often!
Prevalence is a measure of how relatable our experiences are. If our historical worldview does not contain what we experience, it is something new.
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