>>13303961>11 out of 2581 patients have asomnia or hyposomnia (6 have asomnia if I'm reading it correctly)Not sure where you're reading that.
"Amongst the 2581 patients, 1916 reported self-reported OD (74.2%). The prevalence of self-reported OD was 85.9%, 4.5% and 6.9% in mild, moderate and severe-to-critical patients, respectively (P = 0.001)."
Table 2 lists the people who filled out the questionnaire, 81.6% of them reported anosmia, and 24.5% of them still had smell dysfunction at 60 days.
>so if your covid is bad enough to get you hospitalized you have a 0.43% chance of having asomnia/hyposomnia (0.23% chance of asomnia)I'm baffled by what you're looking at. The highest risk by far was with mild cases, not severe cases. This specific study doesn't list age, but it's also far more common in younger people compared to the elderly.