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From The Asian Reporter, V31, #8 (August 2, 2021), page 15.

Study: Vaccinated people can carry as much virus as
others
By Lindsey Tanner, Mike Stobbe, and Philip Marcelo
The Associated Press
AP Illustration by Peter Hamlin
In another dispiriting setback for the nation’s efforts to stamp out
the coronavirus, scientists who studied a big COVID-19 outbreak in
Massachusetts concluded that vaccinated people who got so-called
breakthrough infections carried about the same amount of the coronavirus
as those who did not get the shots.
Health officials on July 30 released details of that research, which
was key in the decision by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) to recommend that vaccinated people return to wearing
masks indoors in parts of the U.S. where the delta variant is fuelling
infection surges. The authors said the findings suggest that the CDC’s
mask guidance should be expanded to include the entire country, even
outside of hot spots.
The findings have the potential to upend past thinking about how the
disease is spread. Previously, vaccinated people who got infected were
thought to have low levels of virus and to be unlikely to pass it to
others. But the new data shows that is not the case with the delta
variant.
The outbreak in Provincetown — a seaside tourist spot on Cape Cod in
the county with Massachusetts’ highest vaccination rate — has so far
included more than 900 cases. About three-quarters of them were people
who were fully vaccinated.
Travis Dagenais, who was among the many vaccinated people infected,
said "throwing caution to the wind" and partying in crowds for long
nights over the July Fourth holiday was a mistake in hindsight.
"The dominant public messaging has been that the vaccine means a
return to normal," the 35-year-old Boston resident said. "Unfortunately,
I’ve now learned it’s a few steps toward normal, not the zero-to-60 that
we seem to have undertaken."
Dagenais credits being vaccinated with easing the worst of the
flu-like symptoms in a couple of days. He has recovered.
Like many states, Massachusetts lifted all COVID-19 restrictions in
late May, ahead of the traditional Memorial Day start of the summer
season. Provincetown last week reinstated an indoor mask requirement for
everyone.
Leaked internal documents on breakthrough infections and the delta
variant suggest the CDC may be considering other changes in advice on
how the nation fights the coronavirus, such as recommending masks for
everyone and requiring vaccines for doctors and other health workers.
The delta variant, first detected in India, causes infections that
are more contagious than the common cold, flu, smallpox, and the Ebola
virus, and it is as infectious as chickenpox, according to the
documents, which mentioned the Provincetown cases.
The documents were obtained by The Washington Post. As they
note, COVID-19 vaccines are still highly effective against the delta
variant at preventing serious illness and death.
The Provincetown outbreak and the documents highlight the enormous
challenge the CDC faces in encouraging vaccination while acknowledging
that breakthrough cases can occur and can be contagious but are
uncommon.
The documents appear to be talking points for CDC staff to use with
the public. One point advised: "Acknowledge the war has changed," an
apparent reference to deepening concern that many millions of vaccinated
people could be a source of wide-ranging spread.
An agency spokeswoman declined to comment on the documents.
The White House defended its approach to rising virus cases and
shifting public health guidelines, repeatedly deferring to the CDC while
stressing the need for vaccinations.
"The most important takeaway is actually pretty simple. We need more
people to get vaccinated," White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre
said.
Pressed about the changing guidance, Jean-Pierre repeatedly said, "We
don’t make those types of decisions from here."
People with breakthrough infections make up an increasing portion of
hospitalizations and in-hospital deaths among COVID-19 patients,
coinciding with the spread of the delta variant, according to the leaked
documents.
Although experts generally agreed with the CDC’s revised indoor
masking stance, some said the report on the Provincetown outbreak does
not prove that vaccinated people are a significant source of new
infections.
"There’s scientific plausibility for the (CDC) recommendation. But
it’s not derived from this study," said Jennifer Nuzzo, a Johns Hopkins
University public health researcher.
The CDC report is based on about 470 COVID-19 cases linked to the
Provincetown festivities, which included densely packed indoor and
outdoor holiday events at bars, restaurants, guest houses, and rental
homes.
Researchers ran tests on a portion of them and found roughly the same
level of virus in those who were fully vaccinated and those who were
not.
Three-quarters of the infections were in fully vaccinated
individuals. Among those fully vaccinated, about 80% experienced
symptoms with the most common being cough, headache, sore throat, muscle
aches, and fever.
Dagenais said he started to feel ill the evening he returned home and
initially chalked it up to long nights of partying in packed
Provincetown nightclubs.
But as the days wore on and the fever, chills, muscle aches, and
fatigue set in, he knew it was something more.
In the report, the measure researchers used to assess how much virus
an infected person is carrying does not indicate whether they are
actually transmitting the virus to other people, said Dr. Angela
Rasmussen, a virologist at the University of Saskatchewan.
CDC officials say more data is coming. They are tracking breakthrough
cases as part of much larger studies that involve following tens of
thousands of vaccinated and unvaccinated people across the country over
time.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support
from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science
Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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