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Asian Reporter web extra, January 7, 2022
Why are so many vaccinated people getting COVID-19 lately?
By Laura Ungar
AP Science Writer
AP Illustration by Peter Hamlin
Why are so many vaccinated people getting COVID-19 lately?
A couple of factors are at play, starting with the emergence
of the highly contagious omicron variant. Omicron is more likely
to infect people, even if it doesn’t make them very sick, and
its surge coincided with the holiday travel season in many
places.
People might mistakenly think the COVID-19 vaccines will
completely block infection, but the shots are mainly designed to
prevent severe illness, says Louis Mansky, a virus researcher at
the University of Minnesota.
And the vaccines are still doing their job on that front,
particularly for people who’ve gotten boosters.
Two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines or one
dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine still offer strong
protection against serious illness from omicron. While those
initial doses aren’t very good at blocking omicron infection,
boosters — particularly with the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines —
rev up levels of the antibodies to help fend off infection.
Omicron appears to replicate much more efficiently than
previous variants. And if infected people have high virus loads,
there’s a greater likelihood they’ll pass it on to others,
especially the unvaccinated. Vaccinated people who get the virus
are more likely to have mild symptoms, if any, since the shots
trigger multiple defenses in your immune system, making it much
more difficult for omicron to slip past them all.
Advice for staying safe hasn’t changed. Doctors say to wear
masks indoors, avoid crowds, and get vaccinated and boosted.
Even though the shots won’t always keep you from catching the
virus, they’ll make it much more likely you stay alive and out
of the hospital. |