Immunization: A process by which a person becomes protected against a disease through vaccination. This term is often used interchangeably with vaccination or inoculation.
I'm not clear on how "the vaccine does not effectively prevent transmission" translates into "vaccinate everyone and give booster shots at once".
I realize these vaccines reduce transmission rates, but ~25% is still alarmingly high. From my meager understanding of epidemiology, this is orders of magnitude above what is needed to stop an epidemic. I also realize that they reduce hospitalization and death rates, both of which are extremely valuable, especially to certain populations.
But there's also a real ethical dilemma, here. The various approvals for the vaccines (especially with young children) hinge on its purported efficacy; this is what was supposed to offset the known-risks and Knightian uncertainties [0].
I realize this has become a terribly politicized issue, and I also realize there are a disappointing number of pig-headed, foolish anti-vaxxers, but it also seems like there's room for informed debate around mass inoculation with these vaccines in particular.
EDIT: I must admit that I am pleasantly surprised by the level-headedness and respect with which you all have responded to this comment. Thank you so much, I really appreciate it.
Vaccine efficacy is against severe COVID illness, not against transmission. The vaccine is still effective, although recent studies indicate that after 6 months it may only be 50% effective against severe illness (this will vary tremendously for each individual).
This is a non-sterilizing vaccine. It was never designed to stop transmission. It did surprisingly block transmission pretty well before the Delta variant. The theory presented here is that the vaccine effect takes time and kicks in on around day 5. With Delta the virus has already become highly transmissive by then. Pre-delta that probably was not the case.
> A recent study found that vaccinated people infected with the delta variant are 63 per cent less likely to infect people who are unvaccinated. [1]
> This is only slightly lower than with the alpha variant, says Brechje de Gier at the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment in the Netherlands, who led the study. Her team had previously found that vaccinated people infected with alpha were 73 per cent less likely to infect unvaccinated people. [2]
> What is important to realise, de Gier says, is that the full effect of vaccines on reducing transmission is even higher than 63 per cent, because most vaccinated people don’t become infected in the first place.
delta completely out competed the original variant, but for the sake of due diligence it would be nice to see data on how effective the vaccine is against the original variant
Yes, and rather than admit this plainly observable fact, incorporate this new information, then base policy choices on what we now know, we still have "health officials" and politicians from one side of the aisle sticking their fingers in their ears, closing their eyes, and shouting "Nah nah nah I can't hear you!" as they push illogical (and arguably wildly immoral) policies like vaccine mandates and perpetual masking and an overall unending bizarro world. I don't know how else to describe COVID anymore other than it's become the world's largest secular religion.
Even if the vaccines don't entirely curb transmission, they reduce it and reduce the risk of severe illness. While for an individual this might impact their decision making framework, I don't see how it should change the framework for public health officials.
> politicians from one side of the aisle sticking their fingers in their ears, closing their eyes, and shouting "Nah nah nah I can't hear you!"
Politicians on the other side of the aisle are attempting to ban any COVID prevention measures at all. I agree that vaccine mandates aren't the only tool available to us, but it's hard to argue with the mandates when there are people fighting against mandatory testing, mask wearing, and social distancing.
Oh vaccines reduce it by some vague amount, if at all, to vaccinated people whom you admit are at far less risk having been vaccinated? Oh well then go nuts, put in whatever draconian rules you want if it may or may not reduce some spread by some minor amount and means that someone gets COVID in 2023 instead of 2022. That's all the justification we need! Quarantine the kids. Fire police. Make everyone hate each other. Sounds totally worth it!! Yay!!
This is the cult of safetyism. A total inability to process risk/reward and tradeoffs, and eschewing basic logic for "protection" whether real or imagined no matter the cost. All I sincerely ask to people such as yourself is, "What is your long-term plan? Is this forever for you?" Usually, I watch as their brains simply break down on the side of the highway. They have no answer because their logic is so bad they get stuck in an eddy with no way to get out. Welcome to the Church of COVID.
And no, conservatives aren't banning prevention measures. Everyone alive is free to get vaccinated (and wear a mask) as most have even in places like Florida. They're banning punitive rules, and whether it's Florida or Texas or all of Scandinavia, they've demonstrated that there are no worse outcomes from simply allowing people to make their own health choices without figuratively putting a gun to their heads (mandates) or making them do anything they don't want to (masks). Meanwhile, half the world upon seeing this: "Nah nah nah I can't hear you!"
Most crime-ridden city in America is vehemently trying to put in a policy which would cause potentially almost a third of their police fired. Again, cult of safetyism run amok. This is what fatally flawed logic gets you.
This is how the lead author of the study we are discussing interprets the new information: “Our paper, which had a global impact within 24 hours of publication, provides important support for the following crucial public health actions: vaccinate the unvaccinated ASAP; give boosters to all those who are eligible ASAP; maintain social and public health measures despite vaccination.” (This is the fifth paragraph the linked article).
How is one supposed to debate with someone who thinks the sun rises in the west? If you can't even process the basic facts about vaccines - they don't reduce spread but reduce risk of complication - that logically make mandates and masks useless (which is now also being proven in real-world data), I mean, there's no point in discussion. You can say the sky is red as many times as you want, that doesn't make it true. Besides the fact that by your logic this is a new ridiculous equilibrium for life, with PERPETUAL quarantines, testing, masks, employer enforcement of personal medical choices, passports to do anything, and more broadly everyone hating each other's guts. Sounds fun!!! Totally worth it!!! Places like Sweden and Florida don't count!!!
You're replying to a thread devoted to discuss evidence the efficacy with which vaccines reduce spread, in which they note that the transmission rate is much lower in doubly vaccinated households than unvaccinated household, and also comment that they were a little surprised and disappointed that the vaccine was not more efficient in reducing transmission, as other vaccines often are.
I don't think you're in a position to lecture people about inability to process basic facts if your partisan screed depends on ignoring this to insist that "they don't reduce spread" is an established fact about vaccines. How is one supposed to debate with someone who insists the sun rises in the west, indeed?
And if what we were/are being sold is reduced severe illness then that seems like a personal issue and the mandates don't make sense.
I get it, if beds are in use by severely ill Covid patients that means less beds for others... then let the bed owners decide how they wish to allocate bed usage, just like some doctors are refusing to see non vaccinated patients.
What we were sold, specifically? One of the challenges to the way this has been been politicized is that the original claims (high efficacy against serious cases, imprecise but substantial efficacy against spread, both of which have held up quite well) were often drowned out by people making much stronger claims for political reasons such as they didn't work at all, or that failing to instantaneously stop the pandemic even at vaccination rates far below the target threshold meant the approach had failed.
Countries with very high vaccination rates such as Portugal or Singapore show quite clearly that all of these statements have been correct. At this point, antivaxers are the only reason why the pandemic is still an issue in industrialized countries.
In late August it was announced that 80% of the Singapore population was now vaccinated against COVID-19.[1] However, in September and October there has been a dramatic surge in cases and deaths in that country.[2]
It's true that it's a dramatic increase, but the death rate still seems to be considerably lower, which is what you'd expect from a vaccine which is not sterilizing. The big question I'd have is what this would look like adjusted for age since American vaccination rates for the highest-risk age groups were also pretty high.
Nit. CFR may not be the best measure, as it is very sensitive to the level of testing, which I expect is higher in a small homogenous country like Singapore. Alternatively, raw deaths per million shows closer numbers, though unclear if Singapore peaked yet.
Yeah, I definitely would want a professional analyst to compare things. The main one I’d be interested in is age-matched rates since as we saw with the Israeli data it’s easy to hit confounds like Simpson’s paradox.
Who specifically said that and when? What I heard was medical professionals saying we could have those things when people got vaccinated. When political posturing caused large numbers of people to refuse vaccinations, masks, and other public health precautions, those ambitions weren't met but I don't blame the people who said it was possible as much as I blame the Republican leaders who personally got vaccinated but told millions of their followers not to.
It's like saying that flossing and tooth brushing were a lie because you had cavities after only doing either half of the month.
just to put numbers on that - 28M children[1] * $20/dose [2] * 2 doses >= $1.1 B
Considering you can't sue the vaccine manufactures for anything and the vaccines are being mandated in various venues, they are definitely a "safe and effective" way to make lots of money...
As I understand it, precisely because they may then pass the infection on to those who may then end up with a severe illness (either because they're unvaccinated or because their protection is waning).
> As I understand it, precisely because they may then pass the infection on to those who may then end up with a severe illness
But we've already established that the vaccine doesn't prevent transmission. It may slightly attenuate transmission, but nowhere near enough to stop the spread. Given these facts, the vaccine is mainly so the vulnerable populations can protect themselves, but most children aren't among those populations (obviously immunocompromised children are).
I don't think I've seen anyone suggest that there is absolutely no impact on transmission. Teenagers were previously a population in which the virus could freely circulate where now there's at least some limited curtailment.
It wasn't my point, but others in this thread have also noted with sources that the level of impact on that younger population (and even small children), including long covid, also appears to be generally underestimated by the general population.
That article you linked (like literally every other one I've read) makes no mention of the numbers that recovered just fine. If they all made a recovery then this vaccine push is pointless.
Yes, but I thought we were talking about the push to vaccinate children, which is under say 14 years old. The younger you are, the less likely you are to have symptoms from COVID, so of the numbers listed in that article it's not clear what proportion of those complications from COVID came from the upper age brackets rather than the 12-15 year olds.
And how stupid is it that these articles talk about studies but still don't actually link to them?
Sure, but now we're talking about the rate of complications from the vaccine vs. COVID among younger populations, and how deadly those complications are. Have you heard any of this nuanced debate, or have you just heard screaming to get everyone vaccinated with no nuance at all?
Nuance: Touting high effectiveness agains infection, which degrades over time. This has been explained elsewhere in this thread, the original vaccine claims were similar and later morphed into "but the vaccine was always designed to protect against severe infection".
Nuance: Not mentioning that their own full application estimates saving one in a million children, under the best circumstances. See Table 14 on page 34.
The difficult ethical question: on one hand there is 1 child you may save given the information available today. On the other hand you don't know which one ahead of time, you need to inoculate 1 million children with a vaccine for which you don't have any longterm data on.
Ok, let's have a look what the vaccine manufacturers claimed in their phase 3 study papers about the durability of the protection:
BioNTech/Pfizer [1]: "This report includes 2 months of follow-up after the second dose of vaccine for half the trial participants and up to 14 weeks’ maximum follow-up for a smaller subset. Therefore, both the occurrence of adverse events more than 2 to 3.5 months after the second dose and more comprehensive information on the duration of protection remain to be determined."
Moderna [2]: "Another limitation is the lack of an identified correlate of protection, a critical tool for future bridging studies. As of the data cutoff, 11 cases of Covid-19 had occurred in the mRNA-1273 group, a finding that limits our ability to detect a correlate of protection. As cases accrue and immunity wanes, it may become possible to determine such a correlate."
AstraZeneca [3]: "In this interim analysis, we have not been able to assess duration of protection, since the first trials were initiated in April, 2020, such that all disease episodes have accrued within 6 months of the first dose being administered. Further evidence will be required to determine duration of protection and the need for additional booster doses of vaccine."
Johnson & Johnson [4]: "A limitation of the trial is the relatively short follow-up, which was necessitated, as in other Covid-19 vaccine trials, by the urgent need for vaccine. The data do not suggest a waning of protection."
Speaking of protection (vaccine effectiveness against infection) durability, I have to admit there is a certain level of disappointment seeing charts like Figure 1 in a US veteran study, which flat out contradicts the J&J claims (VEaI 3%) and partly invalidates the Pfizer claims (VEaI 56%). Or a Qatar study. Or a Sweden study.
There is also the official reaction. Aug 18, 2021: "CDC Director Says Coronavirus Vaccines Less Effective For Delta But Still Prevent Severe Infection".
Possible all of these studies are flawed. And perhaps I'm accidentally misquoting Rachel Walensky. Given that the original trials were closed by vaccinating the control arm of the studies, not even sure where to look for credible longterm tracking of VE against infection data.
On the other hand, possibly the manufacturer original studies were flawed. Or the virus evolved, Delta, duh. These conversations are difficult to carry partly because we are supposed to take the original studies, created with (acceptable) conflict of interest as gold standard, and summarily dismiss any independent verification thereof.
To be fair, before we get carried away, VE against severe infection persists much better given the limited data we have and considering the in-the-field hospitalization & death rates. For adults, especially older, the vaccine is a big net positive.
I don't get what point you are trying to make. Yes, the vaccine efficacy drops over time. This is expected since the antibody levels in the blood drop over time. The manufacturers have pointed out from the beginning that this drop and the potential need for a third shot have to be determined from real-world data, as was done in many studies.
Now the picture seems to be that vaccine effectiveness does indeed drop over time, but protection against severe disease remains pretty strong, with the possible exception of old people who tend to have a weak immune response. Most governments have reacted by recommending third shots to this group in order to further improve the protection.
I really can't see any controversy here. This is precisely the procedure one expects when a new vaccine is introduced.
It is also worth pointing out, that even without boosters the vaccines vastly outperform any medication tested against COVID so far. And they do that much cheaper and with lower side effects.
"Yes, the vaccine efficacy drops over time." That's it. Pfizer made their core of their argument to FDA for 5-11 age group based on VE against infection numbers that we agree do not hold over time. They should take their time to conduct a real study and demonstrate real clinical benefits. There is no rush.
Children's deaths are tragic but extremely low risk for covid. 558 children under 18 died have died in the US, out of a population of 73 Million. How low of risk do you need it to be?
Here in Brazil we've had over 3500 deaths from people under 18, including over 320 babies under 1 year old. There have been cities where sick children were not able to get medical treatment because the pediatric ICU was over capacity. Most of these deaths could have been prevented if a vaccine were available.
At the other end of the spectrum, in British Columbia (population 5 million), there have been 0 deaths in age group 10-19 and 2 deaths in age group <10.
To further confound the issue, mortality rates in infants is significantly larger than in older kids, for US something like 500/100k vs 20/100k, reflecting a number of infants with congenital issues. Some of those end up counted as "death with covid", even if they were not going to make it either way. It is better to search for epi data for kids excluding 0-1 age group, if at all available.
I've heard other people say this and in addition to the common response of helping to reduce spread, I wonder: won't those children grow up to become adults who might experience more serious infection/symptoms? Isn't this like the Chicken Pox vaccine that is commonly given to infants because the disease can be more severe when contracted as an adult?
> I've heard other people say this and in addition to the common response of helping to reduce spread, I wonder: won't those children grow up to become adults who might experience more serious infection/symptoms?
Children exposed to COVID develop strong immunity even if they have no symptoms [1], so the vaccine likely wouldn't convey any more protection than they've already developed.
>Study authors said the findings suggest vaccinating young children against COVID-19 could also elicit a similar or greater degree of protection than that of adults.
>Given similarities in the response to natural infection in children
and adults, it is likely that vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 will also elicit a similar degree of protection
across the full spectrum of age, as has recently been reported for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in children
12–15 years of age (42). Though we cannot directly compare our results to the neutralizing antibody titers
reported in vaccine trial studies, both the vaccine trial data and our results suggest that younger age may be
associated with greater neutralizing antibody responses.
I'm not a doctor, but doesn't this actually suggest that the younger the age we can administer COVID-19 vaccines, the stronger the antibody response is likely to be?
First, those claims are speculative as they admit. Second, you cannot generalize from one or two small studies; for instance, other studies (the much-touted Israeli study) have found that natural immunity actually provides much greater protection.
We'll only figure out the truth long after it matters, so the question being debated is the risk of complications from the vaccine compared to the risk of complications from COVID. Given younger populations have very, very low risk from COVID, this is a subtle and complicated question to answer.
> Given younger populations have very, very low risk from COVID, this is a subtle and complicated question to answer.
Shouldn't we apply the precautionary principle to that question then ? From my primitive understanding of medical ethics there is duty of care versus do no harm.
As such, considering the slim percentages at play, there is IMHO no duty to administer preventive treatments children which are not infected, while harm may be caused.
The vaccine develops a single antibody against a single spike protein. Natural immunity develops not only a spike protein antibody, but also antibodies against a bunch of other parts of the virus.
If the virus alters the spike protein (eg, the A.30 variant which is pretty much immune to the vaccine), all those other antibodies against the unchanged parts are likely still effective at slowing the virus while new antibodies are developed.
That is really just rewriting history (see my comment below about some of the original studies from the trials). Vaccines were presented as having an efficiency of around 90% after the second dose - meaning that only around 8% of people (for Pfizer) in the trials actually got sick, all the graphs and charts from the beginning of the year were about this. The fact that now we are rewriting the history books will not help at all in the trust of the public, especially the ones that still didn't get it.
depends what you read when vaccines came out. I dod not see any claims from scientific sources that vaccines stopped transmissions. Those claims came from the politicians and corporate media
Actually they kind of did (see "BNT162b2 was 95% effective in preventing Covid-19 (95% credible interval, 90.3 to 97.6) below":
"A total of 43,548 participants underwent randomization, of whom 43,448 received injections: 21,720 with BNT162b2 and 21,728 with placebo. There were 8 cases of Covid-19 with onset at least 7 days after the second dose among participants assigned to receive BNT162b2 and 162 cases among those assigned to placebo; BNT162b2 was 95% effective in preventing Covid-19 (95% credible interval, 90.3 to 97.6). Similar vaccine efficacy (generally 90 to 100%) was observed across subgroups defined by age, sex, race, ethnicity, baseline body-mass index, and the presence of coexisting conditions. Among 10 cases of severe Covid-19 with onset after the first dose, 9 occurred in placebo recipients and 1 in a BNT162b2 recipient. The safety profile of BNT162b2 was characterized by short-term, mild-to-moderate pain at the injection site, fatigue, and headache. The incidence of serious adverse events was low and was similar in the vaccine and placebo groups." https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa2034577
Maybe this is legalese, but I am pretty sure your average Joe online, that reads all kind of weird things on Facebook or other places, won't understand the subtleties of this language.
In this case the appropriate definition of "prevention" and "what is prevented" is to be found in the protocol of the trial [1], not in a dictionary of the English language.
If I am reading correctly (but do correct me if I am wrong because I am not 100% certain), only symptomatic cases are counted. Hence, it is quite possible for the vaccine to stop the symptoms, but not the transmission between individuals.
This quote doesn't say anything about whether the vaccine reduces transmission of the virus. Even large phase-3 studies like the ones done for the COVID vaccines don't have anywhere near the statistical power to determine this. Now we have epidemiological data that shows a clear reduction in transmission, but not as much as the vaccines protect against serious disease.
Here is another quote from the same paper [1]:
"This report includes 2 months of follow-up after the second dose of vaccine for half the trial participants and up to 14 weeks’ maximum follow-up for a smaller subset. Therefore, both the occurrence of adverse events more than 2 to 3.5 months after the second dose and more comprehensive information on the duration of protection remain to be determined."
This flowchart would be correct if "prevention" referred to "covid infection", but unfortunately it refers to "covid infection with symptoms". Transmission is not prevented, in this case.
The study that you are referring to took place "Between July 27, 2020, and November 14, 2020". The delta variant started in India in late 2020 and wasn't spreading widely within the United States until 2021. It was listed as a variant-of-concern by the WHO on May 31, 2021.
So the research you are referring to is in regards to other variants of sars-cov2
Science is constantly "rewriting history." It's called learning.
Unfortunately it's a major source of public distrust in science since when someone changes their mind it's perceived as weakness or deception. A dogmatic idiot who never learns anything looks like a stronger person of greater integrity.
The fact that we got any form of vaccine at all in one year is absolutely incredible. That it doesn't work quite as well as we originally thought isn't surprising given that it wasn't out long enough to observe long term efficacy in the wild. Original numbers were based on limited clinical tests and models.
What was mentioned in the original comment is not learning, it is rewriting history. It's one thing to say, we now have the data to say that we need boosters, because after a while people are at risk again, and another thing to change the original story and say, we never said the vaccine prevents infection, we said it only prevents severe cases.
I think calling people "dogmatic idiots" is exactly what actually drives people away from these discussions.
I can't find any source confirming or denying that claim, but I can say it's absolutely not the impression I got from governments and the media. Does anyone have a source saying these vaccines were designed as non-sterilizing?
Science is a process that will get things wrong and is full of experimentation. Unfortunately, this is lost on people, surprisingly some very smart people who should know better.
When you have people screaming at the top of their lungs:
The Science is Settled!!111
They are Science Deniers!!!
Science does not care about your opinion!!!
Etc.
And then scientific learning happens, all those people who were screaming look like dogmatic idiots to those who they were screaming at. It doesn't matter they the ones screaming adopted the new position. I will pull out the old and tired mask issue; when this first started, the people on the "side of science" were screaming that the masks did not help and they trotted out all sorts of scientific studies to back this up, from virus size vs mask to saying ti would be harmful due to keeping more virus at your face. Those who thought masks were important all looked around and said "If masks are such a bad idea, then why are the doctors all wearing them". Now we know it was a stupid and harmful lie.
It is incredible what we accomplished in a year but it is also very frustrating to see how stupidly political and how unnecessarily opaque everyone is being. From the mask lie to the vaccination tempo(we pushed for a shorter amount of time between both shots because we were worried about followup, now we need a third shot?). No-one is willing to sit down and frankly state what we know and what we doesn't know. Our media isn't willing to accept it either. Trust is a two way street but We are all so afraid that uncertainty will breed fear that we take strong positions and end up killing trust.
> Original numbers were based on limited clinical tests and models.
Exactly! Those initial numbers were based on limited clinical trials because time was not on our side. We needed to get something out fast, so we didn't go through all trial options.
That was certainly the case for the original strain, and shortly after the vaccine. What you see today is how the vaccine interacts with newer strains compounded with the effects of time. It’s not rewriting history at all, in fact you can still access all of the original information, it’s just out of date. As it turns out, most people don’t commit the level of critical thought required to process this.
The only way that we would not be dealing with COVID today is if it was taken seriously early on. China seriously dropped the ball. I don’t believe that the resulting quarantines and lockdowns in other nations (which were for the most part necessary to reduce death tolls pre-vaccine) could have gone any better than they did, as people simply do not care.
The 'rewriting history' thing is probably a reference to this:
> Vaccine efficacy is against severe COVID illness, not against transmission
That is not and never has been - up until literally a few months ago - the definition of vaccine efficacy, nor was it the definition being used for COVID vaccines up until it turned out they can't prevent disease.
Trying to assert what vaccine efficacy is without acknowledging that this is an entirely novel use of the term is going to come across as an attempt to confuse people/make them forget that it was only recently that high efficacy was being proudly announced in terms of "preventing COVID-19".
Also bear in mind that this new definition has no real metrics or science behind it. What exactly is "severe" illness. Don't say hospitalizations because people have to choose to go to hospital and are being told that taking the vaccine means they won't have to go to hospital. That's a massive, massive confounder, and none of the public health agencies suddenly making claims about "severe" disease even recognize it exists, let alone control for it.
As long as 'severe' covid efficiency rates are in the same ballpark as covid deaths rates, I'm willing to accept the ballpark even if the details may be marginally off. Another credible metric is ICU utilization, because it's an expensive scarce resource, people are not sent there willy nilly.
> That is not and never has been - up until literally a few months ago - the definition of vaccine efficacy
I remember something else. At least where I live, since the very beginning of the vaccination programme, people were advised to not wait for Pfizer and Moderna vacinnes that were in short supply, but use already widely available AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson vaccines because even though their efficacy against transmission was significantly lower, they still provided very good protection against severe illness; and that protection was always being explicitly stressed out as the most important.
"All of the COVID-19 vaccines approved for use in Canada are effective at preventing symptomatic SARS-CoV infection and COVID-19 related hospitalizations and death."
Because the phrase vaccine efficacy just means how good is a vaccine at something it can be defined relative to any endpoint you want. Nonetheless, both the way the term "vaccine" has been used historically and the way "vaccine efficacy" was being used as recently as this spring were in terms of, it will prevent you from getting infected and sick.
The original claim was that "vaccine efficacy is NOT against transmission" and that this is merely updated information, not an attempt to rewrite history. But it certainly looks that way to a lot of us because to truly accept that the previously distributed information was wrong would imply a major screwup and thus some sort of investigation and accountability. At minimum it means trial failure, for one thing. The pharma companies claimed the trials showed they could prevent COVID-19. They were wrong. That implies other claims made by the trials could be wrong, which implies the government should suspend the rollout until the true facts about what the vaccines actually do can be established.
Obviously no such logic is appearing anywhere in public health. Instead the message has simply shifted to be, vaccines prevent "severe illness and death" and that's why they're awesome and always were. The Pfizer trial at least, didn't actually show that however.
Unfortunately, it was being sold to the public like it was.
>Herd immunity against COVID-19 should be achieved by protecting people through vaccination, not by exposing them to the pathogen that causes the disease. Read the Director-General’s 12 October media briefing speech for more detail.
>Vaccines train our immune systems to create proteins that fight disease, known as ‘antibodies’, just as would happen when we are exposed to a disease but – crucially – vaccines work without making us sick. Vaccinated people are protected from getting the disease in question and passing on the pathogen, breaking any chains of transmission. Visit our webpage on COVID-19 and vaccines for more detail.
>To safely achieve herd immunity against COVID-19, a substantial proportion of a population would need to be vaccinated, lowering the overall amount of virus able to spread in the whole population. One of the aims with working towards herd immunity is to keep vulnerable groups who cannot get vaccinated (e.g. due to health conditions like allergic reactions to the vaccine) safe and protected from the disease. Read our Q&A on vaccines and immunization for more information.
To nit-pick, it is not the vaccine effect take 5 days to kick in but that the vaccine trained immune response takes 5 days to kick in.
I would be interested in seeing how long it takes for natural trained immune response for someone who had Covid previously.
Maybe the best strategy for herd immunity would be to get double vaccinated to prevent serious effects then contract Covid to gain superior antibody response.
>> Maybe the best strategy for herd immunity would be to get double vaccinated to prevent serious effects then contract Covid to gain superior antibody response.
From reading about Covid, I thought the virus had a couple of genes that make it more deadly, one of which tends to suppress the immune system for example. Why not create another variant that is a full virus without those genes and use that as a live vaccine? Sure it might escape, but so what it's less lethal than the one out there right? Obviously this raises a bunch of ethical issues, but they are similar to the issues around forced vaccination.
My guess is that such a vaccine would take longer to develop, but I'm not sure about that.
Wiki also lists the following drawbacks:
In rare cases, particularly when there is inadequate vaccination of the population, natural mutations during viral replication, or interference by related viruses, can cause an attenuated virus to revert to its wild-type form or mutate to a new strain, potentially resulting in the new virus being infectious or pathogenic.[34][39]
Often not recommended for immunocompromised patients due to the risk of potentially severe complications.[34][40][41]
Live strains typically require advanced maintenance, such as refrigeration and fresh media, making transport to remote areas difficult and costly.[34][42]
> This is a non-sterilizing vaccine. It was never designed to stop transmission.
Nobody really knew in precise terms what the vaccines were going to do because there was initially no long-term data about their efficacy or studies about transmission.
But it's simply a fact that the vaccines were sold to the public as The Way to end the pandemic and return to normalcy. Did you completely miss all of the talk about "herd immunity"? Are you not aware of all of the places, like California, that ended their mask mandates and told vaccinated individuals they could gather indoors together?
If the vaccines were never intended or thought to significantly reduce if not stop transmission, why was "herd immunity" ever in our pandemic vocabulary? Why did the mask requirements get lifted? Why were vaccinated individuals told they could basically resume normal activities in the company of other vaccinated individuals? And why are some places pushing so hard on vaccine passports?
It's okay that the vaccines haven't proven to be as effective as we had hoped in ending the pandemic. But there is a real issue with the way the vaccines were sold to the public. The messaging that was used to encourage people to get vaccinated was way ahead of what we knew in terms of the science and unfortunately, this is likely going to cause long-term issues. Specifically, I think it's going to be harder and harder to get people to take boosters. I'm predicting that each successive round of boosters will see fewer and fewer takers.
I'm not clear on how "the vaccine does not effectively prevent transmission" translates into "vaccinate everyone and give booster shots at once".
Because the vaccination reduces the severity of disease so you don't want the unvaccinated getting very ill, and you don't want people with waning vaccine-induced immunity getting ill.
But those were already marginal in children, for example. Aren't you concerned about the risks to children? What benefit do they obtain in exchange for that risk?
Lower hospitalization rates also reduces the issue of not being able to get treatment for non-covid issues when the hospitals are full of covid patients [1].
> I'm not clear on how "the vaccine does not effectively prevent transmission" translates into "vaccinate everyone and give booster shots at once".
It translates into "vaccinate everyone" because the fact that transmission can't be eliminated means that it's likely that nearly every person will eventually be exposed to live virus, so we'd better hope everyone is vaccinated so the effects of that exposure are lessened.
If it were more effective at reducing spread, vaccinating everyone would be less critical, since we might achieve heard immunity with a smaller vaccinated percentage.
This reasoning completely ignores the reality that COVID does not pose a significant risk to most people. Why not vaccinate those who are at risk, on a voluntary basis?
To reiterate: I am not opposed to vaccines, but concerned about the general push towards mandatory vaccination for everyone.
I live in North Texas, our Trauma Service region has 4m people in it, at one point during the Delta wave we had less than 70 free ICU beds - and we have more hospital capacity than much (if not all) of the state per capita (and indeed, much of the country as well). During the Delta wave, the hospitals here were full of unvaccinated 20 and 30 somethings without complicating health issues, with serious COVID, most of which would have been prevented had they been vaccinated.
Unless the social contract is changed so those who are unvaccinated can be denied treatment (meaning limited to palliative care) during periods of capacity required rationing for serious (read, requires an ICU bed) cases of COVID, mandatory vaccinations are effectively a requirement.
Is it fair to the person who was vaccinated, then gets in a car accident (or has a stroke, or some other issue) and dies waiting for an ICU bed, because all the beds are full of folks who could have been vaccinated (and probably wouldn't have needed an ICU bed if they had) but decided not to be?
I'm pretty libertarian, and I loathe making these choices - but as long as hospital capacity is a shared resource, your choice as an individual effects others, and in times of crisis society sometimes has a right to decide some things for you, whether you like it or not, remove that linkage, and then folks should be able to do as they please.
"Mandatory COVID vaccinations" has other aspects to it. Who makes it mandatory? Employers who may have a reason beyond public health for mandating, namely that they don't want a bunch of employees falling seriously ill at roughly the same time.
>I think the better solution is allowing denial of treatment over government mandated COVID vaccinations.
I hope you are being sarcastic, that is a horrible policy because it can easily lead to: *I think it is better to allow denial of treatment to drug addicts because they knew what they were signing up for when they started using.
Those that want to treat drug addicts are still allowed and free to do so.
Edit: Just like those that want to treat unvaccinated COVID patients are still allowed and free to do so. And if they want to charge more money (due to shortage of supply or high demand) so be it.
It is frustrating that anti-mandate crowd ignores this comment, in my mind this is the singular reason that strict measures should still be required.
A functioning health care system is a cornerstone of any modern society. Until we get to a point where subsequent covid waves aren't overloading the healthcare system, then we need to keep fighting this thing.
> During the Delta wave, the hospitals here were full of unvaccinated 20 and 30 somethings without complicating health issues, with serious COVID, most of which would have been prevented had they been vaccinated
I've seen the current state analysis before, but imo, it's hard to tell how many unvaccinated 20-30 year olds (with/without comorbidities) were affected (slide 11 combines ages 18-49).
The article mentions that "it’s now commonplace for previously healthy, younger adults with decades of life expectancy on the line to be among the sickest of the sick" but shows no data.
I've seen it enough from enough from enough different diverse sources for it to count as something resembling data - the thing is, the two crunch periods for COVID, are the times the data gets the blurriest, because the people who collect it are so busy.
I thought that mandating that a person's access to healthcare being based on their personal life choices was a horror from the bad old days of US-style insurance-based private healthcare?
Personally, I'm tired of old smokers and unhealthy overweight people taking up healthcare resources that I should have! (sarcasm, of course).
I'd also be much more sympathetic to vaccine evangelism if the damn things got nationalized/opensourced at some point and didn't translate to pure pharma profit.
One rationale I've seen is that uncontrolled spread and too many unvaccinated people overwhelms the hospital system, thus causing dramatic harm to people who need non-COVID related treatments. This dynamic played out in the US just a few weeks ago. That last wave had a larger proportion of hospitalized people who were younger and, in theory, less at risk because that group was less vaccinated as a whole.
The vaccines do reduce spread some, but they also keep people out of the hospitals.
The only people who say this are those who don't consider long covid. Which is a terrible outcome and seems to indiscriminately chose who to effect (in the pool of non-hospitalized people) and not be rare at all (10-30%).
It's misleading to transfix on the died:"recovered" dichotomy. Recovered just means "not dead, not testing positive".
And there is a good chance that this virus is sowing the seeds of a massive wave of Parkinson's in the future. There is good evidence of some forms of Parkinsons having viral origin. COVID has mirrored most of the traits these suspect viruses have (gut, vagus nerve, lewy bodies)
For Parkinson's just google "Parkinson's viral etiology" There are dozens of legitimate published studies. None focus specifically on COVID, because its so new and the timeframes so long. But there is a link between infection with serious viruses (including coronaviruses) and later neural degeneration.
All I needed to know. Thank you for editing your previous comment. Even so, saying there is a "good chance" is still a massive over-statement of what is currently known.
The study on "long-haul" prevalence did not paint the same picture of a terrifying "Long Covid". The reported symptoms seemed quite mild - "fatigue and shortness of breath". Thanks to a combination of increased unhealthiness thanks to lockdowns, and the now endless cycles of diseases being passed around, that sound like my every day life. The published evidence around "Long Covid" certainly does not match the popular and widely-circulated (generally online) stories and dire admonitions.
Also fatigue and shortness of breath are about as "mild" as chronic back pain, i.e. you don't want it. It really isn't something people should dismiss in the same way you shouldn't dismiss moving a piano by yourself. You'll likely be fine, but if you tweak your back you'll live with a constant reminder that you should not have done that.
It translates into "offer vaccine to everyone" but it also significantly diminishes the justification for forcing people to get vaccinated - it's usually presented as "do it for others" a.k.a. "herd immunity" but currently it seems we won't be able to achieve that even with 100% vaccination rate.
'we might achieve heard immunity with a smaller vaccinated percentage.'
It is crossing back and forth between humans and animals such as cats and deer. Therefore, there can never be herd immunity because it mutates and crosses back to humans. The possibility of herd immunity is not fact based. Some would call the continued presumption of a possible herd immunity to be anti-science, as it can not work.
On note is that they say their numbers to too small to note differences between the vaccines, but being a UK study it would seem likely to be predominantly the AZ vaccine which seems to have some potentially significant differences in effectiveness than the Pfizer/Moderna vaccine.
(fact)
Over $50B tax payer dollars just to roll out the beta vaccine.
(speculation)
Indefinite updates are coming because it keeps you poor and others rich. There can be no ladder out of poverty like there was with capitalism in their new world they want to build.
Anyone following the Climate Crisis logic closely are profiting by making steps toward shared goals and foreseeing eventualities. So 'They' could be just about anyone.
We are heading toward an eventual global socialist system under the banner of climate crisis. Nothing controls population numbers like crisis, science, and socialism.
Another angle is the redefinition of the term vaccine (https://www.miamiherald.com/news/coronavirus/article25411126...). The CDC claims they redefined it away from the word “immunity” towards the word “protection” because no vaccine grants perfect immunity. Personally I find that to be a bad answer. By taking a weighty word like “vaccine” and redefining it, the expectations of risks and benefits the public holds were exploited. For the majority of the public, those who are under 50 and healthy, COVID poses little risk - it’s not much different from a typical seasonal flu. Personally I think getting an mRNA vaccine is a reasonable low-risk action but the risk of undergoing any medical intervention is nonzero, and it is higher for a novel technology. I bet that if the COVID vaccines were not called a vaccine, people would evaluate the risk reward trade off differently.
The redefinition game seems to be quite frequent in American politics these days. It comes up in culture war activism (definitions for “man”, “woman”, etc) as it has for many years, but it is more disturbing to see it come from public agencies and trusted institutions like universities or hospitals or the CDC. Apart from the word “vaccine”, there is the controversial issue of COVID’s origins. Anthony Fauci repeatedly denied that the NIH was involved with Gain of Function research but they later admitted what was obvious all along, that they had indeed funded GoF (https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2021/10/nih-admits-funding-r...). One claim I’ve seen in articles is that the NIH and/or NIAID (the agency Fauci leads) basically came up with a private, narrow definition for GoF that excludes the GoF they were conducting. This is why it is important that definitions remain static unless accepted by an overwhelming majority of the public - it undermines basic communication.
I know it’s blasphemy to question the vaccines, but when they wane in effectiveness after 3 months and don’t prevent transmission much at all, surely the strategy and messaging has to change?
Vulerable people should be getting their boosters like clockwork, but the real world data completely changes the equation as to whether you should vaccinating under 25s (to pick an arbitrary cutoff).
Polio and influenza are completely different viruses. SARS-CoV-2 variants are much more closely related. They aren’t just coronaviruses or even SL (SARS like) but more narrowly similar than that. Should that matter? I’m not sure - but it is a difference relative to the polio/influenza example.
I'm not a partisan, so I won't charge you with blasphemy. :) However...
> don’t prevent transmission much at all
Where does this come from? I'd previously heard that these vaccines do a pretty good job of curbing transmission. Or rather, a number like 30% efficacy (of preventing transmission) is really good for vaccines.
I'm not sure this is the right number. I have read the initial results for one of the vaccines (I think it was from Pfizer) and with my, admittedly cursory and layman reading of the data, the reduction of transmission in vaccinated vs unvaccinated households wasn't at all dramatic, something like 1.5x for some cohorts. And this was with "freshly" vaccinated, post 2 weeks after vaccination (remember, 2 weeks post vaccination susceptibility to infection is increased).
> 30% efficacy (of preventing transmission) is really good for vaccines.
Seriously? If you were to double that number, such a poor efficacy rate (e.g. 60%) would not even be worthy of classification as a “vaccine” per standards prior to 2019. Truth is this drug should never have been classified as a “vaccine” in the first place, but scientific standards took the backseat as fear and panic overruled. The need for having a “vaccine solution” was so paramount that we turned a blind eye to any red flags and crucified anyone who pointed out the obviously concerning facts about the Covid vaccine solution such as 1/ it was developed in less than a week, 2/ development was led by a company with zero prior successful products launched ever, 3/ used technology never been used at scale (let alone universally) 4/ all profit-driven biotech/pharma companies willing to participate were offered free money AND complete protection from ANY liability resulting from the ‘vac’ granted by .gov.
The issue is more complex than that. Imagine you are responsible for the lives of millions of citizens. You will probably do whatever you can to minimize the risk (of transmission, severe cases, deaths).
For people in charge, the most powerful tool today is the vaccine as there is no universal 100%-efficient cure yet. They will encourage everyone to vaccinate as this is basically the only thing they can do, in spite of its efficiency being much lower than expected. The alternatives are limiting various freedoms of citizens up to extreme forms like in Australia.
This is not some binary “vaccinate everyone or take away freedoms choice”. And politicians are not our parents, they are not responsible for the lives of millions. They have limited roles on our lives that we elect them to; “taking care of me and making sure I’m healthy” is not their role, it’s mine.
> when they wane in effectiveness after 3 months and don’t prevent transmission much at all
Two things to consider: “wane” is not the same as “dropping to 0” — the protections against severe cases have been shown to remain substantial even if it's not 100% — and “prevent transmission” in this case was referring to people who live in the same household, which is by far the hardest situation in which to prevent spread since that's a significant amount of time sharing air without masks. A better question would be things like how much vaccinations prevent spread from shorter / masked contexts such as transit, school, work, shopping, etc. — similar to how we might not conclude that a bulletproof vest is useless because it can't handle sustained fire from a machine gun.
"Our paper, which had a global impact within 24 hours of publication, provides important support for the following crucial public health actions: vaccinate the unvaccinated ASAP; give boosters to all those who are eligible ASAP; maintain social and public health measures despite vaccination.
Nowhere in this article are anti-viral treatments mentioned. While part of the arsenal may be vaccination, boosters and social distancing, why ignore the potential of anti-virals?[1][2] Surely they are an important part of the picture.
The study focussed on vaccinations from what I could tell. I don't think they were interested in treatments. Breaking transmission chains seems logical to me, vaccines are cheap and through prevention save the tax payer a lot of money.
True, the study did focus on vaccines, but I would have also thought perhaps a statement in that quoted paragraph along the lines of "And authorise available anti-viral treatments ASAP" would have brought a little more balance.
I do wonder about, and would like to see, a calculation of the cost of widespread anti-viral availability versus the cost of vaccination programmes. The current global COVID-19 death rate is at around 2% of total infectious cases, or around 5 million people.[1] Vaccination will have by now certainly assisted in preventing this number being even higher. I wonder about the cost of producing and distributing globally 500 million anti-viral treatments, versus an also very high number of vaccines and the cost of education programmes prompting people to accept vaccination. Would the current pandemic situation (health and economic) be different if the early focus had have been on anti-viral treatments rather than vaccines?
Vaccines are dirt cheap. Just the cost of the covid test to diagnose covid (which is required before the appropriate anti-viral may be prescribed) is probably going to be more than the cost of a vaccine.
> Would the current pandemic situation (health and economic) be different if the early focus had have been on anti-viral treatments rather than vaccines?
For starters, there were no anti-viral medications that actually worked against COVID. And that was not due to lack of trying. Generally speaking, it is harder to develop a small-molecule antiviral medication than it is to develop an effective vaccine. For many viral diseases there are no drugs that work, or you need a cocktail of drugs at the same time.
If you want to a deeper dive on some of these recent studies showing the waning effect of the vaccines, Chris Martenson did a video on a couple yesterday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnB8Tep92Us
The main conclusions from these recent studies
* Vaccines don't lower transmission rate in households
* Vaccines drop below 50% effectiveness at reducing severe infection after 6 months (with a sharper drop for just reducing infection)
We may end up with mandates for boosters every six months. Unfortunately this will increase the side effects from vaccination: it would have been nice to pay that cost only once every several years instead of every 6 months.
There is also the issue that vaccine immunity is not as effective as nature immunity. It's not clear how much of a problem this is if one can keep getting boosters, but it's something that needs more research. Once someone is on vaccines their immune response is going to be focused on the spike protein whereas a natural response will include antibodies to other parts of the virus.
> We may end up with mandates for boosters every six months. Unfortunately this will increase the side effects from vaccination: it would have been nice to pay that cost only once every several years instead of every 6 months.
Doesn't this assume that we won't make any improvements to the COVID vaccine? A year ago we didn't have any approved vaccines. It seems reasonable to assume that we could improve vaccines over time that may increase efficacy or duration of prevention.
The real-world data here in the US has supported continued efficacy against hospitalization and death. The CDC's current numbers[1] say that unvaccinated people are at 11.3x greater risk of dying than vaccinated people. The current guidance for boosters is specifically for those groups where efficacy has waned more over time (elderly, immunocompromised) and there's some evidence that Moderna's higher initial dosage has caused its efficacy to wane less (and the booster is only half the original dose).
My point is that frequency of boosters and necessity of new boosters is not at all a clear picture. It has now been 6 months since I got my second shot and I'm not even eligible for a booster, let alone having someone mandate it.
> Vaccines don't lower transmission rate in households
This is neither interesting nor unexpected. Getting infected is a probabilistic thing. The more exposure events you endure and the longer those events last the higher the chances you will become infected. Prior immunity whether from vaccination or prior infection lowers your chances that any given exposure event will infect you, but with enough exposure events you will eventually get infected.
In a household with an infected person you will be getting many long lasting exposure events, especially during the first few days when the initially infected person is infectious but does not yet know they are.
The important question in regards to lowering transmission rates is not what happens when I'm living with infected people. It is what happens when I briefly encounter infected strangers during my normal daily activites.
> Vaccines drop below 50% effectiveness at reducing severe infection after 6 months
Everything I've seen that claims a large reduction in effectiveness at reducing severe infection has been incorrect due to Simpson's paradox or similar.
As someone who tested positive last Friday after being vaccinated back in March--I can say the symptoms I'm experiencing vs. some of my co-workers who just got full-on COVID are MUCH more mild. I've had a little congestion, some stuffiness, a head/neck ache, and a little upset-tummy. Some of my co-workers were out for weeks with the heavy flu-like symptoms and I'm sitting here wishing I could just clear my throat and go back to work.
Glad you handled it well. My experience with Covid was even less mild (felt like a small hangover at worst). Clearly I am not at risk for hospitalization due to Covid, however am being pressured to receive a vaccine that I do not want/need/trust.
I still do not understand how smart/intelligent people can defend, or outright vehemently advocate for, vaccine mandates given that what we know (not to mention that what we don’t). Brings to mind the following quote by Benjamin Disraeli; ‘the whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so sure of themselves, yet wiser people are full of doubt.’
I am up-to-date on all of my required vaccines, however the ‘Covid vaccine’ is a vaccine by name only—so much so that the CDC had to update the definition of a vaccine LMAO!
Until the shot has several years of longitudinal case data available for analysis, I will remain uncomfortable taking the untested artificially designed gene therapy all for a disease that poses insignificant risk to me. Sorry for being a jerk, frustrating times
If it's "for the public health" to mandate a vaccine to age groups for a disease that presents essentially no threat to those people, then we have already crossed a terrible line.
> Vaccine mandates have been a thing for a 100 years.
Even longer. George Washington mandated smallpox inoculation for the army during the Revolutionary War in 1777, inoculating the current soldiers and then every recruit going forward.
At the time only about 1/4 of the soldiers had gained immunity by prior smallpox infection. The rest were vulnerable.
On the other side, most of the British soldiers had immunity so this put the Continental army at a big disadvantage, as a smallpox outbreak could incapacitate a whole regiment.
After the army was inoculated, they just suffered isolated smallpox infections that failed to incapacitate a single regiment.
The Native Americans and the slaves that had elected to fight for the British in exchange for their freedom did not have immunity and were devastated by smallpox, greatly reducing their impact on the war.
How many people in this thread either are professional epidemiologists or virologists, or work directly with covid patients? Can their comments get a special “I actually know what I’m talking about” tag?
Alas, I think a lot of people would consider “random anonymous internet commenter” to be more trustworthy than “professional researcher”; and others would consider “not boosting the voices of non-experts” to be censorship...
The action of vaccines is to pre-prime the body to fight the virus, like letting students read the answers to the test the week before.
The result is not some kind of impermeable Star Wars shield, but a reduced likelihood that any one exposure will result in an infection.
So, given a 90% effectiveness rate, it means that an exposure level (e.g., getting directly in the way of the coughs of a contagious person) that would typically infect 10 of 10 people, will now only result in only one infection of vaccinated people.
However, if those vaccinated people expose themselves 10 times to the same viral load, they are now highly likely to get infected.
Since living in the same household as an infected person literally creates multiple large exposures per day for the contagious period, it is no surprise that many vaccinated people will get infected in that situation.
This does NOT mean the vaccine is ineffective, it is simply a limitation of the biology to be aware of.
Reducing the household infections — continuous exposure — from 38% down to 25% is a very strong effect, cutting the infection rate by 1/3, or leaving unvaccinated people 50% more vulnerable.
Moreover, these effects are multiplied. The 50% greater rate of household infections for the unvaccinated means 50% more people going out in the world infecting more people. This can have a massive effect on the R0 value, extending the pandemic greatly over the vaccinated rates.
So, yes, the lesson should definitely be to vaccinate everyone, and make sure that they keep up to date on their boosters.
You are incorrect, on many points. I am unwilling to deeply elaborate about vaccines or immune systems, however want to state my rejection of your faulty logic publicly (need more of this).
Ultimately the ‘actions of vaccines’ is to instantiate immunity, which the Covid ‘vaccine’ fails to do.
Please educate yourself about the differences between a vaccine vs a therapeutic. Words matter. Just because having elevated levels of ser Vitamin-C effectively reduces one’s exposure to catching the common-cold DOESN’T mean I can recklessly label Emergen-C as a ‘cold vaccine’.
I'm honestly shocked and disappointed how much credence is given to anti-vaccination beliefs or even vaccination-skepticism or vaccination-hesitancy by people with a supposed higher education, even a science education.
The reasons vary. None of them are quantifiable. A few common ones:
- "We don't know the long-term effects" -> triggering an immune response is extremely quick in terms of effects. Any issues (eg the highly unlikely potential clotting issue in Astra-Zeneca) are actually identified quickly. Vaccines aren't drugs. Drugs are prone to long-term effects. Vaccines are different;
- (now defunct) "The vaccine had an emergency authorization" -> it still went through Phase 3 Clinical Trials. People don't actually understand what "emergency authorization" actually means. It's primarily administrative, not clinical;
- "The vaccine doesn't prevent transmission" -> It greatly diminishes severe outcomes including hospitalization and death. Immune response isn't simply a boolean switch. Viruses go through several stages before they become infections. Respiratory illnesses will probably still have the virus get to the respiratory tract and allow transmission;
- "Risks of death are low" -> collapse of the hospital system would not only impact Covid patients but non-Covid patients. We already have had healthcare workers who essentially had to decide who lives and who dies. That's a lot of responsibility to put on someone for an unquantifiable risk;
- "I did my own research" -> No, you didn't. You watched a Youtube video from an unverifiable source or just a plain whacko. That's not research. Stop using that word;
- "Just vaccinate the people at risk" -> we don't really know who they are, particularly in young people. Some people have severe reactions for reasons that aren't entirely clear yet;
- "Body autonomy" -> Diseases don't affect just you. You can transmit a virus to people who are at risk and may not for legitimate medical reasons be able to get a vaccine;
- "This was rushed" -> Actually, it wasn't. DARPA had promoted mRNA vaccine research for years before Covid-19 and we can all be thankful for that;
- "It's no more severe than the flu" -> In a bad year, the flu might kill 40,000 people in the US. The Covid death count stands at 800,000 at least and that's probably underreported by a lot, particularly with pandering politicians keen to underplay the significance and impact (eg New York not initially counting nursing home resident deaths).
I could go on.
One statistic I love to hear from anti-vaxxers is "the death rate is only 1% (or 2%)". If there is a bowl of 100 M&Ms and one of them will kill you, are you eating one? A large football stadium might hold 50,000 people. Are you going to a match when 500 of those people will die?
We've now administered billions of vaccine doses worldwide and yet there's no quantifiable risk of adverse effects. Vaccines are a medical miracle that has eliminated polio and smallpox and all but eliminated a host of other devastating diseases. The only difference between those vaccines and Covid-19 is that it's more recent. That's it.
If a disease affected just you then I'd say "go right ahead and don't get it" but it doesn't. And the minute risk of adverse outcomes from that vaccine outweighing the very quantifiable benefits to not only you but other people is just a level of irrational selfishness that I find deeply depressing.
It also convinces me just how screwed we are on climate change when people are willing to let themselves and other die rather than have the minor inconvenience of a shot.
Driving to the supermarket is riskier than having the vaccine yet I don't see people not driving places. Humans are bad at assessing risk. The sad part here is this irrationality is impacti...
Although I agree the data are pretty clear at this point that these vaccines are all quite safe, there are absolutely quantifiable (low) risks [0].
Beyond the data, people aren't idiots for being skeptical of new treatments. Unknown unknowns are impossible to quantify. You point to polio as something that's similar but not as new. That example doesn't do a lot to support your argument, since when the polio vaccine was new it gave ~20% of recipients polio and killed 10 children [1].
The main issue now is unvaxxed people digging in their heels as we get more proof of the vaccines' safety (although the learnings on their efficacy are more mixed). I don't think those people will be encouraged by arrogant and infantilizing rants against them.
> "We don't know the long-term effects" -> triggering an immune response is extremely quick in terms of effects. Any issues (eg the highly unlikely potential clotting issue in Astra-Zeneca) are actually identified quickly.
To flatly disregard long-term effects seems quite premature. The adjusted risk for narcolepsy in younger people, following exposure to adjuvanted A(H1N1) pandemic vaccine (Pandemrix) in 2009 for example, seemed to be "increased 14 times during the first year after vaccination, three times elevated the second year" [1].
Regarding the current vaccines, Pfizer informed the FDA, that "long-term safety of COVID-19 vaccine in participants 5 to <12 years of age will be studied in 5 post-authorization safety studies, including a 5-year follow-up study to evaluate long term sequelae of post-vaccination myocarditis/pericarditis" [2].
> "Just vaccinate the people at risk" -> we don't really know who they are, particularly in young people.
We also don't really know who is at risk of getting vaccine-related side effects, particularly in young people. A pre-print study from University of California "suggests that boys aged 12 to 15, with no underlying medical conditions, are four to six times more likely to be diagnosed with vaccine-related myocarditis than ending up in hospital with Covid over a four-month period" [3]. This is not a fact, but definitely a call for further studies.
> "This was rushed" -> Actually, it wasn't. DARPA had promoted mRNA vaccine research for years before Covid-19
From my perspective, people seem to be mostly concerned with rushed clinical trials, not prior research. Scientists repeatedly told the public that, despite the speed, "the safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines currently in use have been rigorously tested" [4].
"But, for researchers who were testing Pfizer’s vaccine at several sites in Texas during that autumn, speed may have come at the cost of data integrity and patient safety. A regional director who was employed at the research organisation Ventavia Research Group has told The BMJ that the company falsified data, unblinded patients, employed inadequately trained vaccinators, and was slow to follow up on adverse events reported in Pfizer’s pivotal phase III trial" [5]. Did it only happen at several sites in Texas? We don't really know. But it seems to be a valid concern.
> (now defunct) "The vaccine had an emergency authorization"
It should be defunct but it is not. Many of those who were against the vaccines on the grounds that it was under EUA rather than regular approval now say that the approved vaccine (Comirnaty) is not yet available in the US--it is still BNT162b2 that Pfizer is shipping in the US.
A bottle of Comirnaty (which is in fact shipping in the US) and a bottle of BNT162b2 contain exactly the same substance, with the only difference between what is printed on the label so it should not make a difference to a rational person.
But we have a lot of irrational people. Heck, there was even a Senator who was pushing this idea (Ron Johnson (R-Wisconsin)).
When did epidemiologists forget about superspreading and the dispersion number in transmitting SARS-CoV-2?
Household transmission may be the bulk of all transmissions, but without superspreading you don't get very good household-to-household transmission and the virus doesn't propagate well. And we've known that for almost 2 years now.
What is the effect of vaccination on superspreading? That's about literally the only question I care about when it comes to vaccinated transmission, and nobody is bothering to study it.
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[ 235 ms ] story [ 4042 ms ] thread[1] https://healthfeedback.org/infection-induced-immunity-versus...
I realize these vaccines reduce transmission rates, but ~25% is still alarmingly high. From my meager understanding of epidemiology, this is orders of magnitude above what is needed to stop an epidemic. I also realize that they reduce hospitalization and death rates, both of which are extremely valuable, especially to certain populations.
But there's also a real ethical dilemma, here. The various approvals for the vaccines (especially with young children) hinge on its purported efficacy; this is what was supposed to offset the known-risks and Knightian uncertainties [0].
I realize this has become a terribly politicized issue, and I also realize there are a disappointing number of pig-headed, foolish anti-vaxxers, but it also seems like there's room for informed debate around mass inoculation with these vaccines in particular.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knightian_uncertainty
EDIT: I must admit that I am pleasantly surprised by the level-headedness and respect with which you all have responded to this comment. Thank you so much, I really appreciate it.
This is a non-sterilizing vaccine. It was never designed to stop transmission. It did surprisingly block transmission pretty well before the Delta variant. The theory presented here is that the vaccine effect takes time and kicks in on around day 5. With Delta the virus has already become highly transmissive by then. Pre-delta that probably was not the case.
But this is very much my point: we were sold a benefit-risk ratio that assumed the vaccines effectively curb transmission.
Moreover, now that Delta is a thing, aren't the ethical issues nonetheless present.
> A recent study found that vaccinated people infected with the delta variant are 63 per cent less likely to infect people who are unvaccinated. [1]
> This is only slightly lower than with the alpha variant, says Brechje de Gier at the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment in the Netherlands, who led the study. Her team had previously found that vaccinated people infected with alpha were 73 per cent less likely to infect unvaccinated people. [2]
> What is important to realise, de Gier says, is that the full effect of vaccines on reducing transmission is even higher than 63 per cent, because most vaccinated people don’t become infected in the first place.
[0] https://www.newscientist.com/article/2294250-how-much-less-l...
[1] https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.10.14.21264959v...
[2] https://www.newscientist.com/definition/uk-covid-19-variant-...
> politicians from one side of the aisle sticking their fingers in their ears, closing their eyes, and shouting "Nah nah nah I can't hear you!"
Politicians on the other side of the aisle are attempting to ban any COVID prevention measures at all. I agree that vaccine mandates aren't the only tool available to us, but it's hard to argue with the mandates when there are people fighting against mandatory testing, mask wearing, and social distancing.
This is the cult of safetyism. A total inability to process risk/reward and tradeoffs, and eschewing basic logic for "protection" whether real or imagined no matter the cost. All I sincerely ask to people such as yourself is, "What is your long-term plan? Is this forever for you?" Usually, I watch as their brains simply break down on the side of the highway. They have no answer because their logic is so bad they get stuck in an eddy with no way to get out. Welcome to the Church of COVID.
And no, conservatives aren't banning prevention measures. Everyone alive is free to get vaccinated (and wear a mask) as most have even in places like Florida. They're banning punitive rules, and whether it's Florida or Texas or all of Scandinavia, they've demonstrated that there are no worse outcomes from simply allowing people to make their own health choices without figuratively putting a gun to their heads (mandates) or making them do anything they don't want to (masks). Meanwhile, half the world upon seeing this: "Nah nah nah I can't hear you!"
Really?
https://abc7chicago.com/chicago-police-fop-john-catanzara-ma...
But then again, that's always been what I thought the policies should be since there was never any strong claims to vaccines preventing transmission.
I don't think you're in a position to lecture people about inability to process basic facts if your partisan screed depends on ignoring this to insist that "they don't reduce spread" is an established fact about vaccines. How is one supposed to debate with someone who insists the sun rises in the west, indeed?
I get it, if beds are in use by severely ill Covid patients that means less beds for others... then let the bed owners decide how they wish to allocate bed usage, just like some doctors are refusing to see non vaccinated patients.
"Here we regain our freedom"
"There will not be a 4th wave"
That's what we were sold. Anyone who questioned it was called an antivax conspiracy theorist.
And the worst part is, the namecallers still think they're on the right/smart side even after miles of backpedaling.
In late August it was announced that 80% of the Singapore population was now vaccinated against COVID-19.[1] However, in September and October there has been a dramatic surge in cases and deaths in that country.[2]
[1] https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/singapore-fully-v...
[2] https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/singapore/
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explor...
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explor...
It's like saying that flossing and tooth brushing were a lie because you had cavities after only doing either half of the month.
Since children have very little chance of a severe COVID infection, why the push to vaccinate them then?
Considering you can't sue the vaccine manufactures for anything and the vaccines are being mandated in various venues, they are definitely a "safe and effective" way to make lots of money...
[1] https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2021-10-20/...
[2] https://www.managedhealthcareexecutive.com/view/the-price-ta...
But we've already established that the vaccine doesn't prevent transmission. It may slightly attenuate transmission, but nowhere near enough to stop the spread. Given these facts, the vaccine is mainly so the vulnerable populations can protect themselves, but most children aren't among those populations (obviously immunocompromised children are).
It wasn't my point, but others in this thread have also noted with sources that the level of impact on that younger population (and even small children), including long covid, also appears to be generally underestimated by the general population.
https://www.contagionlive.com/view/delta-variant-icauses-unp...
[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7927578/
Myocarditis is very serious. Any child with it will need cardiology visits for most of their life.
[1] https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg25133462-800-myocardi...
And how stupid is it that these articles talk about studies but still don't actually link to them?
Well, the middle-man doesn't want you going to the source. What's his job gonna be if you do?
Nuance: Not mentioning that their own full application estimates saving one in a million children, under the best circumstances. See Table 14 on page 34.
The difficult ethical question: on one hand there is 1 child you may save given the information available today. On the other hand you don't know which one ahead of time, you need to inoculate 1 million children with a vaccine for which you don't have any longterm data on.
https://www.fda.gov/media/153447/download
BioNTech/Pfizer [1]: "This report includes 2 months of follow-up after the second dose of vaccine for half the trial participants and up to 14 weeks’ maximum follow-up for a smaller subset. Therefore, both the occurrence of adverse events more than 2 to 3.5 months after the second dose and more comprehensive information on the duration of protection remain to be determined."
Moderna [2]: "Another limitation is the lack of an identified correlate of protection, a critical tool for future bridging studies. As of the data cutoff, 11 cases of Covid-19 had occurred in the mRNA-1273 group, a finding that limits our ability to detect a correlate of protection. As cases accrue and immunity wanes, it may become possible to determine such a correlate."
AstraZeneca [3]: "In this interim analysis, we have not been able to assess duration of protection, since the first trials were initiated in April, 2020, such that all disease episodes have accrued within 6 months of the first dose being administered. Further evidence will be required to determine duration of protection and the need for additional booster doses of vaccine."
Johnson & Johnson [4]: "A limitation of the trial is the relatively short follow-up, which was necessitated, as in other Covid-19 vaccine trials, by the urgent need for vaccine. The data do not suggest a waning of protection."
[1] https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa2034577 [2] https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa2035389 [3] https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6... [4] https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2101544
There is also the official reaction. Aug 18, 2021: "CDC Director Says Coronavirus Vaccines Less Effective For Delta But Still Prevent Severe Infection".
Possible all of these studies are flawed. And perhaps I'm accidentally misquoting Rachel Walensky. Given that the original trials were closed by vaccinating the control arm of the studies, not even sure where to look for credible longterm tracking of VE against infection data.
On the other hand, possibly the manufacturer original studies were flawed. Or the virus evolved, Delta, duh. These conversations are difficult to carry partly because we are supposed to take the original studies, created with (acceptable) conflict of interest as gold standard, and summarily dismiss any independent verification thereof.
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.10.13.21264966v...
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2114114
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3949410
https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewsolender/2021/08/18/cdc-d...
UK, VE vs delta over 90 days
The trend makes me fairly intrigued to see the follow up at 180, 270 etc. days after 2nd dose.Now the picture seems to be that vaccine effectiveness does indeed drop over time, but protection against severe disease remains pretty strong, with the possible exception of old people who tend to have a weak immune response. Most governments have reacted by recommending third shots to this group in order to further improve the protection.
I really can't see any controversy here. This is precisely the procedure one expects when a new vaccine is introduced.
It is also worth pointing out, that even without boosters the vaccines vastly outperform any medication tested against COVID so far. And they do that much cheaper and with lower side effects.
To further confound the issue, mortality rates in infants is significantly larger than in older kids, for US something like 500/100k vs 20/100k, reflecting a number of infants with congenital issues. Some of those end up counted as "death with covid", even if they were not going to make it either way. It is better to search for epi data for kids excluding 0-1 age group, if at all available.
http://www.bccdc.ca/Health-Info-Site/Documents/Week_41_2021_...
Children exposed to COVID develop strong immunity even if they have no symptoms [1], so the vaccine likely wouldn't convey any more protection than they've already developed.
[1] https://pediatrics.duke.edu/news/children-mild-or-asymptomat...
>Given similarities in the response to natural infection in children and adults, it is likely that vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 will also elicit a similar degree of protection across the full spectrum of age, as has recently been reported for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in children 12–15 years of age (42). Though we cannot directly compare our results to the neutralizing antibody titers reported in vaccine trial studies, both the vaccine trial data and our results suggest that younger age may be associated with greater neutralizing antibody responses.
I'm not a doctor, but doesn't this actually suggest that the younger the age we can administer COVID-19 vaccines, the stronger the antibody response is likely to be?
We'll only figure out the truth long after it matters, so the question being debated is the risk of complications from the vaccine compared to the risk of complications from COVID. Given younger populations have very, very low risk from COVID, this is a subtle and complicated question to answer.
Shouldn't we apply the precautionary principle to that question then ? From my primitive understanding of medical ethics there is duty of care versus do no harm.
As such, considering the slim percentages at play, there is IMHO no duty to administer preventive treatments children which are not infected, while harm may be caused.
"San Francisco says children 5 to 11 will have to comply with proof-of-vaccination mandate"
https://www.sfgate.com/bay-area-politics/article/San-Francis...
If the virus alters the spike protein (eg, the A.30 variant which is pretty much immune to the vaccine), all those other antibodies against the unchanged parts are likely still effective at slowing the virus while new antibodies are developed.
"A total of 43,548 participants underwent randomization, of whom 43,448 received injections: 21,720 with BNT162b2 and 21,728 with placebo. There were 8 cases of Covid-19 with onset at least 7 days after the second dose among participants assigned to receive BNT162b2 and 162 cases among those assigned to placebo; BNT162b2 was 95% effective in preventing Covid-19 (95% credible interval, 90.3 to 97.6). Similar vaccine efficacy (generally 90 to 100%) was observed across subgroups defined by age, sex, race, ethnicity, baseline body-mass index, and the presence of coexisting conditions. Among 10 cases of severe Covid-19 with onset after the first dose, 9 occurred in placebo recipients and 1 in a BNT162b2 recipient. The safety profile of BNT162b2 was characterized by short-term, mild-to-moderate pain at the injection site, fatigue, and headache. The incidence of serious adverse events was low and was similar in the vaccine and placebo groups." https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa2034577
Maybe this is legalese, but I am pretty sure your average Joe online, that reads all kind of weird things on Facebook or other places, won't understand the subtleties of this language.
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/prevent?...
If I am reading correctly (but do correct me if I am wrong because I am not 100% certain), only symptomatic cases are counted. Hence, it is quite possible for the vaccine to stop the symptoms, but not the transmission between individuals.
[1] https://www.nejm.org/doi/suppl/10.1056/NEJMoa2034577/suppl_f...
Here is another quote from the same paper [1]: "This report includes 2 months of follow-up after the second dose of vaccine for half the trial participants and up to 14 weeks’ maximum follow-up for a smaller subset. Therefore, both the occurrence of adverse events more than 2 to 3.5 months after the second dose and more comprehensive information on the duration of protection remain to be determined."
[1] https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa2034577
Person A >Transmission> Person B >Transmission> Person C
Person A >Transmission> Person B (Prevention)
So the research you are referring to is in regards to other variants of sars-cov2
"A COVID-19 Vaccine May Be Only 50% Effective. Is That Good Enough?"
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/09/12/9119879...
August 7, 2020:
"Fauci says COVID-19 vaccine may only be 50 percent effective"
https://nypost.com/2020/08/07/fauci-says-covid-19-vaccine-ma...
Unfortunately it's a major source of public distrust in science since when someone changes their mind it's perceived as weakness or deception. A dogmatic idiot who never learns anything looks like a stronger person of greater integrity.
The fact that we got any form of vaccine at all in one year is absolutely incredible. That it doesn't work quite as well as we originally thought isn't surprising given that it wasn't out long enough to observe long term efficacy in the wild. Original numbers were based on limited clinical tests and models.
I think calling people "dogmatic idiots" is exactly what actually drives people away from these discussions.
> It was never designed to stop transmission.
I can't find any source confirming or denying that claim, but I can say it's absolutely not the impression I got from governments and the media. Does anyone have a source saying these vaccines were designed as non-sterilizing?
When you have people screaming at the top of their lungs: The Science is Settled!!111 They are Science Deniers!!! Science does not care about your opinion!!! Etc.
And then scientific learning happens, all those people who were screaming look like dogmatic idiots to those who they were screaming at. It doesn't matter they the ones screaming adopted the new position. I will pull out the old and tired mask issue; when this first started, the people on the "side of science" were screaming that the masks did not help and they trotted out all sorts of scientific studies to back this up, from virus size vs mask to saying ti would be harmful due to keeping more virus at your face. Those who thought masks were important all looked around and said "If masks are such a bad idea, then why are the doctors all wearing them". Now we know it was a stupid and harmful lie.
It is incredible what we accomplished in a year but it is also very frustrating to see how stupidly political and how unnecessarily opaque everyone is being. From the mask lie to the vaccination tempo(we pushed for a shorter amount of time between both shots because we were worried about followup, now we need a third shot?). No-one is willing to sit down and frankly state what we know and what we doesn't know. Our media isn't willing to accept it either. Trust is a two way street but We are all so afraid that uncertainty will breed fear that we take strong positions and end up killing trust.
Exactly! Those initial numbers were based on limited clinical trials because time was not on our side. We needed to get something out fast, so we didn't go through all trial options.
science and history are two distinct things
it's ok to rewrite science
it's not ok to rewrite history
The only way that we would not be dealing with COVID today is if it was taken seriously early on. China seriously dropped the ball. I don’t believe that the resulting quarantines and lockdowns in other nations (which were for the most part necessary to reduce death tolls pre-vaccine) could have gone any better than they did, as people simply do not care.
> Vaccine efficacy is against severe COVID illness, not against transmission
That is not and never has been - up until literally a few months ago - the definition of vaccine efficacy, nor was it the definition being used for COVID vaccines up until it turned out they can't prevent disease.
Trying to assert what vaccine efficacy is without acknowledging that this is an entirely novel use of the term is going to come across as an attempt to confuse people/make them forget that it was only recently that high efficacy was being proudly announced in terms of "preventing COVID-19".
Also bear in mind that this new definition has no real metrics or science behind it. What exactly is "severe" illness. Don't say hospitalizations because people have to choose to go to hospital and are being told that taking the vaccine means they won't have to go to hospital. That's a massive, massive confounder, and none of the public health agencies suddenly making claims about "severe" disease even recognize it exists, let alone control for it.
I remember something else. At least where I live, since the very beginning of the vaccination programme, people were advised to not wait for Pfizer and Moderna vacinnes that were in short supply, but use already widely available AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson vaccines because even though their efficacy against transmission was significantly lower, they still provided very good protection against severe illness; and that protection was always being explicitly stressed out as the most important.
"All of the COVID-19 vaccines approved for use in Canada are effective at preventing symptomatic SARS-CoV infection and COVID-19 related hospitalizations and death."
Because the phrase vaccine efficacy just means how good is a vaccine at something it can be defined relative to any endpoint you want. Nonetheless, both the way the term "vaccine" has been used historically and the way "vaccine efficacy" was being used as recently as this spring were in terms of, it will prevent you from getting infected and sick.
The original claim was that "vaccine efficacy is NOT against transmission" and that this is merely updated information, not an attempt to rewrite history. But it certainly looks that way to a lot of us because to truly accept that the previously distributed information was wrong would imply a major screwup and thus some sort of investigation and accountability. At minimum it means trial failure, for one thing. The pharma companies claimed the trials showed they could prevent COVID-19. They were wrong. That implies other claims made by the trials could be wrong, which implies the government should suspend the rollout until the true facts about what the vaccines actually do can be established.
Obviously no such logic is appearing anywhere in public health. Instead the message has simply shifted to be, vaccines prevent "severe illness and death" and that's why they're awesome and always were. The Pfizer trial at least, didn't actually show that however.
With which variant alpha or delta? and how much time after the vaccination?
Science is about rewriting "history". If somebody on HN doesn't understand that, then we're in far deeper hole than I though possible.
it's ok to rewrite science
it's not ok to rewrite history
Unfortunately, it was being sold to the public like it was.
>Herd immunity against COVID-19 should be achieved by protecting people through vaccination, not by exposing them to the pathogen that causes the disease. Read the Director-General’s 12 October media briefing speech for more detail.
>Vaccines train our immune systems to create proteins that fight disease, known as ‘antibodies’, just as would happen when we are exposed to a disease but – crucially – vaccines work without making us sick. Vaccinated people are protected from getting the disease in question and passing on the pathogen, breaking any chains of transmission. Visit our webpage on COVID-19 and vaccines for more detail.
>To safely achieve herd immunity against COVID-19, a substantial proportion of a population would need to be vaccinated, lowering the overall amount of virus able to spread in the whole population. One of the aims with working towards herd immunity is to keep vulnerable groups who cannot get vaccinated (e.g. due to health conditions like allergic reactions to the vaccine) safe and protected from the disease. Read our Q&A on vaccines and immunization for more information.
https://www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/herd-immunity-lockd...
To nit-pick, it is not the vaccine effect take 5 days to kick in but that the vaccine trained immune response takes 5 days to kick in.
I would be interested in seeing how long it takes for natural trained immune response for someone who had Covid previously.
Maybe the best strategy for herd immunity would be to get double vaccinated to prevent serious effects then contract Covid to gain superior antibody response.
From reading about Covid, I thought the virus had a couple of genes that make it more deadly, one of which tends to suppress the immune system for example. Why not create another variant that is a full virus without those genes and use that as a live vaccine? Sure it might escape, but so what it's less lethal than the one out there right? Obviously this raises a bunch of ethical issues, but they are similar to the issues around forced vaccination.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attenuated_vaccine
My guess is that such a vaccine would take longer to develop, but I'm not sure about that.
Wiki also lists the following drawbacks:
In rare cases, particularly when there is inadequate vaccination of the population, natural mutations during viral replication, or interference by related viruses, can cause an attenuated virus to revert to its wild-type form or mutate to a new strain, potentially resulting in the new virus being infectious or pathogenic.[34][39]
Often not recommended for immunocompromised patients due to the risk of potentially severe complications.[34][40][41]
Live strains typically require advanced maintenance, such as refrigeration and fresh media, making transport to remote areas difficult and costly.[34][42]
Nobody really knew in precise terms what the vaccines were going to do because there was initially no long-term data about their efficacy or studies about transmission.
But it's simply a fact that the vaccines were sold to the public as The Way to end the pandemic and return to normalcy. Did you completely miss all of the talk about "herd immunity"? Are you not aware of all of the places, like California, that ended their mask mandates and told vaccinated individuals they could gather indoors together?
If the vaccines were never intended or thought to significantly reduce if not stop transmission, why was "herd immunity" ever in our pandemic vocabulary? Why did the mask requirements get lifted? Why were vaccinated individuals told they could basically resume normal activities in the company of other vaccinated individuals? And why are some places pushing so hard on vaccine passports?
It's okay that the vaccines haven't proven to be as effective as we had hoped in ending the pandemic. But there is a real issue with the way the vaccines were sold to the public. The messaging that was used to encourage people to get vaccinated was way ahead of what we knew in terms of the science and unfortunately, this is likely going to cause long-term issues. Specifically, I think it's going to be harder and harder to get people to take boosters. I'm predicting that each successive round of boosters will see fewer and fewer takers.
Because the vaccination reduces the severity of disease so you don't want the unvaccinated getting very ill, and you don't want people with waning vaccine-induced immunity getting ill.
[1] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/icu-non-covid-patients-wait/
It translates into "vaccinate everyone" because the fact that transmission can't be eliminated means that it's likely that nearly every person will eventually be exposed to live virus, so we'd better hope everyone is vaccinated so the effects of that exposure are lessened.
If it were more effective at reducing spread, vaccinating everyone would be less critical, since we might achieve heard immunity with a smaller vaccinated percentage.
To reiterate: I am not opposed to vaccines, but concerned about the general push towards mandatory vaccination for everyone.
True, but this is not the deciding factor. What matters is the ability of the healthcare system to take care of the sick during outbreaks.
I live in North Texas, our Trauma Service region has 4m people in it, at one point during the Delta wave we had less than 70 free ICU beds - and we have more hospital capacity than much (if not all) of the state per capita (and indeed, much of the country as well). During the Delta wave, the hospitals here were full of unvaccinated 20 and 30 somethings without complicating health issues, with serious COVID, most of which would have been prevented had they been vaccinated.
Unless the social contract is changed so those who are unvaccinated can be denied treatment (meaning limited to palliative care) during periods of capacity required rationing for serious (read, requires an ICU bed) cases of COVID, mandatory vaccinations are effectively a requirement.
Is it fair to the person who was vaccinated, then gets in a car accident (or has a stroke, or some other issue) and dies waiting for an ICU bed, because all the beds are full of folks who could have been vaccinated (and probably wouldn't have needed an ICU bed if they had) but decided not to be?
I'm pretty libertarian, and I loathe making these choices - but as long as hospital capacity is a shared resource, your choice as an individual effects others, and in times of crisis society sometimes has a right to decide some things for you, whether you like it or not, remove that linkage, and then folks should be able to do as they please.
*I think the better solution is allowing denial of treatment over government mandated COVID vaccinations.
I hope you are being sarcastic, that is a horrible policy because it can easily lead to: *I think it is better to allow denial of treatment to drug addicts because they knew what they were signing up for when they started using.
or worse.
Those that want to treat drug addicts are still allowed and free to do so.
Edit: Just like those that want to treat unvaccinated COVID patients are still allowed and free to do so. And if they want to charge more money (due to shortage of supply or high demand) so be it.
I don't believe medical ethics should be reformed in a way to open such a door. It might be Pandora's.
A functioning health care system is a cornerstone of any modern society. Until we get to a point where subsequent covid waves aren't overloading the healthcare system, then we need to keep fighting this thing.
Source?
https://www.utsouthwestern.edu/covid-19/assets/modeling.pdf
See the graphs on Slide 11.
I've seen the current state analysis before, but imo, it's hard to tell how many unvaccinated 20-30 year olds (with/without comorbidities) were affected (slide 11 combines ages 18-49).
The article mentions that "it’s now commonplace for previously healthy, younger adults with decades of life expectancy on the line to be among the sickest of the sick" but shows no data.
Personally, I'm tired of old smokers and unhealthy overweight people taking up healthcare resources that I should have! (sarcasm, of course).
So you don't have your measles etc childhood vaccines?
The vaccines do reduce spread some, but they also keep people out of the hospitals.
It's misleading to transfix on the died:"recovered" dichotomy. Recovered just means "not dead, not testing positive".
And there is a good chance that this virus is sowing the seeds of a massive wave of Parkinson's in the future. There is good evidence of some forms of Parkinsons having viral origin. COVID has mirrored most of the traits these suspect viruses have (gut, vagus nerve, lewy bodies)
>this virus is sowing the seeds of a massive wave of Parkinson's in the future
Do you have a source for any of this? On the face of it, this is outrageous fear-mongering.
Long haul prevalence:
https://health.ucdavis.edu/health-news/newsroom/studies-show...
For Parkinson's just google "Parkinson's viral etiology" There are dozens of legitimate published studies. None focus specifically on COVID, because its so new and the timeframes so long. But there is a link between infection with serious viruses (including coronaviruses) and later neural degeneration.
All I needed to know. Thank you for editing your previous comment. Even so, saying there is a "good chance" is still a massive over-statement of what is currently known.
The study on "long-haul" prevalence did not paint the same picture of a terrifying "Long Covid". The reported symptoms seemed quite mild - "fatigue and shortness of breath". Thanks to a combination of increased unhealthiness thanks to lockdowns, and the now endless cycles of diseases being passed around, that sound like my every day life. The published evidence around "Long Covid" certainly does not match the popular and widely-circulated (generally online) stories and dire admonitions.
https://www.webmd.com/lung/news/20201106/covid-19-linked-to-...
Also fatigue and shortness of breath are about as "mild" as chronic back pain, i.e. you don't want it. It really isn't something people should dismiss in the same way you shouldn't dismiss moving a piano by yourself. You'll likely be fine, but if you tweak your back you'll live with a constant reminder that you should not have done that.
On the other hand, recent reports show some much more disturbing possible side effects:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2021/10/01/restless-an...
It is crossing back and forth between humans and animals such as cats and deer. Therefore, there can never be herd immunity because it mutates and crosses back to humans. The possibility of herd immunity is not fact based. Some would call the continued presumption of a possible herd immunity to be anti-science, as it can not work.
(speculation) Indefinite updates are coming because it keeps you poor and others rich. There can be no ladder out of poverty like there was with capitalism in their new world they want to build.
We are heading toward an eventual global socialist system under the banner of climate crisis. Nothing controls population numbers like crisis, science, and socialism.
It may have benefits but it will not go smoothly.
You also have no idea what the FDA or CDC considers or why. Instead you posit your own interpretation of what an approval is or should be.
The redefinition game seems to be quite frequent in American politics these days. It comes up in culture war activism (definitions for “man”, “woman”, etc) as it has for many years, but it is more disturbing to see it come from public agencies and trusted institutions like universities or hospitals or the CDC. Apart from the word “vaccine”, there is the controversial issue of COVID’s origins. Anthony Fauci repeatedly denied that the NIH was involved with Gain of Function research but they later admitted what was obvious all along, that they had indeed funded GoF (https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2021/10/nih-admits-funding-r...). One claim I’ve seen in articles is that the NIH and/or NIAID (the agency Fauci leads) basically came up with a private, narrow definition for GoF that excludes the GoF they were conducting. This is why it is important that definitions remain static unless accepted by an overwhelming majority of the public - it undermines basic communication.
Vulerable people should be getting their boosters like clockwork, but the real world data completely changes the equation as to whether you should vaccinating under 25s (to pick an arbitrary cutoff).
Downvotes in 3, 2, 1....
Then, why would we expect that a vaccine against the original strain of the Covid 19 virus works as well against a new variant?
> don’t prevent transmission much at all
Where does this come from? I'd previously heard that these vaccines do a pretty good job of curbing transmission. Or rather, a number like 30% efficacy (of preventing transmission) is really good for vaccines.
Seriously? If you were to double that number, such a poor efficacy rate (e.g. 60%) would not even be worthy of classification as a “vaccine” per standards prior to 2019. Truth is this drug should never have been classified as a “vaccine” in the first place, but scientific standards took the backseat as fear and panic overruled. The need for having a “vaccine solution” was so paramount that we turned a blind eye to any red flags and crucified anyone who pointed out the obviously concerning facts about the Covid vaccine solution such as 1/ it was developed in less than a week, 2/ development was led by a company with zero prior successful products launched ever, 3/ used technology never been used at scale (let alone universally) 4/ all profit-driven biotech/pharma companies willing to participate were offered free money AND complete protection from ANY liability resulting from the ‘vac’ granted by .gov.
For people in charge, the most powerful tool today is the vaccine as there is no universal 100%-efficient cure yet. They will encourage everyone to vaccinate as this is basically the only thing they can do, in spite of its efficiency being much lower than expected. The alternatives are limiting various freedoms of citizens up to extreme forms like in Australia.
Two things to consider: “wane” is not the same as “dropping to 0” — the protections against severe cases have been shown to remain substantial even if it's not 100% — and “prevent transmission” in this case was referring to people who live in the same household, which is by far the hardest situation in which to prevent spread since that's a significant amount of time sharing air without masks. A better question would be things like how much vaccinations prevent spread from shorter / masked contexts such as transit, school, work, shopping, etc. — similar to how we might not conclude that a bulletproof vest is useless because it can't handle sustained fire from a machine gun.
Nowhere in this article are anti-viral treatments mentioned. While part of the arsenal may be vaccination, boosters and social distancing, why ignore the potential of anti-virals?[1][2] Surely they are an important part of the picture.
[1] https://www.bbc.com/news/health-58764440
[2] https://www.pharmaceutical-technology.com/news/uk-government...
I do wonder about, and would like to see, a calculation of the cost of widespread anti-viral availability versus the cost of vaccination programmes. The current global COVID-19 death rate is at around 2% of total infectious cases, or around 5 million people.[1] Vaccination will have by now certainly assisted in preventing this number being even higher. I wonder about the cost of producing and distributing globally 500 million anti-viral treatments, versus an also very high number of vaccines and the cost of education programmes prompting people to accept vaccination. Would the current pandemic situation (health and economic) be different if the early focus had have been on anti-viral treatments rather than vaccines?
[1] https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries
> Would the current pandemic situation (health and economic) be different if the early focus had have been on anti-viral treatments rather than vaccines?
For starters, there were no anti-viral medications that actually worked against COVID. And that was not due to lack of trying. Generally speaking, it is harder to develop a small-molecule antiviral medication than it is to develop an effective vaccine. For many viral diseases there are no drugs that work, or you need a cocktail of drugs at the same time.
The main conclusions from these recent studies
We may end up with mandates for boosters every six months. Unfortunately this will increase the side effects from vaccination: it would have been nice to pay that cost only once every several years instead of every 6 months.There is also the issue that vaccine immunity is not as effective as nature immunity. It's not clear how much of a problem this is if one can keep getting boosters, but it's something that needs more research. Once someone is on vaccines their immune response is going to be focused on the spike protein whereas a natural response will include antibodies to other parts of the virus.
That's speculative, unless you have info that is not yet widely disseminated.
we've gone from "diminishes in 3 months" to "may last over 10 months"
https://www.goodrx.com/blog/how-long-does-covid-19-immunity-...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/roberthart/2021/06/04/past-covi...
notwithstanding the flaws of measuring only antibodies as a true measure of effective immunity
Doesn't this assume that we won't make any improvements to the COVID vaccine? A year ago we didn't have any approved vaccines. It seems reasonable to assume that we could improve vaccines over time that may increase efficacy or duration of prevention.
My point is that frequency of boosters and necessity of new boosters is not at all a clear picture. It has now been 6 months since I got my second shot and I'm not even eligible for a booster, let alone having someone mandate it.
[1]: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/effective...
This is neither interesting nor unexpected. Getting infected is a probabilistic thing. The more exposure events you endure and the longer those events last the higher the chances you will become infected. Prior immunity whether from vaccination or prior infection lowers your chances that any given exposure event will infect you, but with enough exposure events you will eventually get infected.
In a household with an infected person you will be getting many long lasting exposure events, especially during the first few days when the initially infected person is infectious but does not yet know they are.
The important question in regards to lowering transmission rates is not what happens when I'm living with infected people. It is what happens when I briefly encounter infected strangers during my normal daily activites.
> Vaccines drop below 50% effectiveness at reducing severe infection after 6 months
Everything I've seen that claims a large reduction in effectiveness at reducing severe infection has been incorrect due to Simpson's paradox or similar.
For the epidemiologist or medical professional in the crowd, what's an "infectious index (first) case"?
Even longer. George Washington mandated smallpox inoculation for the army during the Revolutionary War in 1777, inoculating the current soldiers and then every recruit going forward.
At the time only about 1/4 of the soldiers had gained immunity by prior smallpox infection. The rest were vulnerable.
On the other side, most of the British soldiers had immunity so this put the Continental army at a big disadvantage, as a smallpox outbreak could incapacitate a whole regiment.
After the army was inoculated, they just suffered isolated smallpox infections that failed to incapacitate a single regiment.
The Native Americans and the slaves that had elected to fight for the British in exchange for their freedom did not have immunity and were devastated by smallpox, greatly reducing their impact on the war.
The action of vaccines is to pre-prime the body to fight the virus, like letting students read the answers to the test the week before.
The result is not some kind of impermeable Star Wars shield, but a reduced likelihood that any one exposure will result in an infection.
So, given a 90% effectiveness rate, it means that an exposure level (e.g., getting directly in the way of the coughs of a contagious person) that would typically infect 10 of 10 people, will now only result in only one infection of vaccinated people.
However, if those vaccinated people expose themselves 10 times to the same viral load, they are now highly likely to get infected.
Since living in the same household as an infected person literally creates multiple large exposures per day for the contagious period, it is no surprise that many vaccinated people will get infected in that situation.
This does NOT mean the vaccine is ineffective, it is simply a limitation of the biology to be aware of.
Reducing the household infections — continuous exposure — from 38% down to 25% is a very strong effect, cutting the infection rate by 1/3, or leaving unvaccinated people 50% more vulnerable.
Moreover, these effects are multiplied. The 50% greater rate of household infections for the unvaccinated means 50% more people going out in the world infecting more people. This can have a massive effect on the R0 value, extending the pandemic greatly over the vaccinated rates.
So, yes, the lesson should definitely be to vaccinate everyone, and make sure that they keep up to date on their boosters.
Ultimately the ‘actions of vaccines’ is to instantiate immunity, which the Covid ‘vaccine’ fails to do.
Please educate yourself about the differences between a vaccine vs a therapeutic. Words matter. Just because having elevated levels of ser Vitamin-C effectively reduces one’s exposure to catching the common-cold DOESN’T mean I can recklessly label Emergen-C as a ‘cold vaccine’.
The reasons vary. None of them are quantifiable. A few common ones:
- "We don't know the long-term effects" -> triggering an immune response is extremely quick in terms of effects. Any issues (eg the highly unlikely potential clotting issue in Astra-Zeneca) are actually identified quickly. Vaccines aren't drugs. Drugs are prone to long-term effects. Vaccines are different;
- (now defunct) "The vaccine had an emergency authorization" -> it still went through Phase 3 Clinical Trials. People don't actually understand what "emergency authorization" actually means. It's primarily administrative, not clinical;
- "The vaccine doesn't prevent transmission" -> It greatly diminishes severe outcomes including hospitalization and death. Immune response isn't simply a boolean switch. Viruses go through several stages before they become infections. Respiratory illnesses will probably still have the virus get to the respiratory tract and allow transmission;
- "Risks of death are low" -> collapse of the hospital system would not only impact Covid patients but non-Covid patients. We already have had healthcare workers who essentially had to decide who lives and who dies. That's a lot of responsibility to put on someone for an unquantifiable risk;
- "I did my own research" -> No, you didn't. You watched a Youtube video from an unverifiable source or just a plain whacko. That's not research. Stop using that word;
- "Just vaccinate the people at risk" -> we don't really know who they are, particularly in young people. Some people have severe reactions for reasons that aren't entirely clear yet;
- "Body autonomy" -> Diseases don't affect just you. You can transmit a virus to people who are at risk and may not for legitimate medical reasons be able to get a vaccine;
- "This was rushed" -> Actually, it wasn't. DARPA had promoted mRNA vaccine research for years before Covid-19 and we can all be thankful for that;
- "It's no more severe than the flu" -> In a bad year, the flu might kill 40,000 people in the US. The Covid death count stands at 800,000 at least and that's probably underreported by a lot, particularly with pandering politicians keen to underplay the significance and impact (eg New York not initially counting nursing home resident deaths).
I could go on.
One statistic I love to hear from anti-vaxxers is "the death rate is only 1% (or 2%)". If there is a bowl of 100 M&Ms and one of them will kill you, are you eating one? A large football stadium might hold 50,000 people. Are you going to a match when 500 of those people will die?
We've now administered billions of vaccine doses worldwide and yet there's no quantifiable risk of adverse effects. Vaccines are a medical miracle that has eliminated polio and smallpox and all but eliminated a host of other devastating diseases. The only difference between those vaccines and Covid-19 is that it's more recent. That's it.
If a disease affected just you then I'd say "go right ahead and don't get it" but it doesn't. And the minute risk of adverse outcomes from that vaccine outweighing the very quantifiable benefits to not only you but other people is just a level of irrational selfishness that I find deeply depressing.
It also convinces me just how screwed we are on climate change when people are willing to let themselves and other die rather than have the minor inconvenience of a shot.
Driving to the supermarket is riskier than having the vaccine yet I don't see people not driving places. Humans are bad at assessing risk. The sad part here is this irrationality is impacti...
Beyond the data, people aren't idiots for being skeptical of new treatments. Unknown unknowns are impossible to quantify. You point to polio as something that's similar but not as new. That example doesn't do a lot to support your argument, since when the polio vaccine was new it gave ~20% of recipients polio and killed 10 children [1].
The main issue now is unvaxxed people digging in their heels as we get more proof of the vaccines' safety (although the learnings on their efficacy are more mixed). I don't think those people will be encouraged by arrogant and infantilizing rants against them.
[0] https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/wr/mm7027e2.htm
[1] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1383764/
To flatly disregard long-term effects seems quite premature. The adjusted risk for narcolepsy in younger people, following exposure to adjuvanted A(H1N1) pandemic vaccine (Pandemrix) in 2009 for example, seemed to be "increased 14 times during the first year after vaccination, three times elevated the second year" [1].
Regarding the current vaccines, Pfizer informed the FDA, that "long-term safety of COVID-19 vaccine in participants 5 to <12 years of age will be studied in 5 post-authorization safety studies, including a 5-year follow-up study to evaluate long term sequelae of post-vaccination myocarditis/pericarditis" [2].
> "Just vaccinate the people at risk" -> we don't really know who they are, particularly in young people.
We also don't really know who is at risk of getting vaccine-related side effects, particularly in young people. A pre-print study from University of California "suggests that boys aged 12 to 15, with no underlying medical conditions, are four to six times more likely to be diagnosed with vaccine-related myocarditis than ending up in hospital with Covid over a four-month period" [3]. This is not a fact, but definitely a call for further studies.
> "This was rushed" -> Actually, it wasn't. DARPA had promoted mRNA vaccine research for years before Covid-19
From my perspective, people seem to be mostly concerned with rushed clinical trials, not prior research. Scientists repeatedly told the public that, despite the speed, "the safety and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines currently in use have been rigorously tested" [4].
"But, for researchers who were testing Pfizer’s vaccine at several sites in Texas during that autumn, speed may have come at the cost of data integrity and patient safety. A regional director who was employed at the research organisation Ventavia Research Group has told The BMJ that the company falsified data, unblinded patients, employed inadequately trained vaccinators, and was slow to follow up on adverse events reported in Pfizer’s pivotal phase III trial" [5]. Did it only happen at several sites in Texas? We don't really know. But it seems to be a valid concern.
[1] https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/pds.4788
[2] https://www.fda.gov/media/153409/download
[3] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/sep/10/boys-more-at-r...
[4] https://www.reuters.com/article/factcheck-vaccine-clot-idUSL...
[5] https://www.bmj.com/content/375/bmj.n2635
It should be defunct but it is not. Many of those who were against the vaccines on the grounds that it was under EUA rather than regular approval now say that the approved vaccine (Comirnaty) is not yet available in the US--it is still BNT162b2 that Pfizer is shipping in the US.
A bottle of Comirnaty (which is in fact shipping in the US) and a bottle of BNT162b2 contain exactly the same substance, with the only difference between what is printed on the label so it should not make a difference to a rational person.
But we have a lot of irrational people. Heck, there was even a Senator who was pushing this idea (Ron Johnson (R-Wisconsin)).
Household transmission may be the bulk of all transmissions, but without superspreading you don't get very good household-to-household transmission and the virus doesn't propagate well. And we've known that for almost 2 years now.
What is the effect of vaccination on superspreading? That's about literally the only question I care about when it comes to vaccinated transmission, and nobody is bothering to study it.