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appalachiablue

(43,180 posts)
Tue Apr 13, 2021, 07:04 PM Apr 2021

'Breakthrough' Covid Cases Among People Already Vaccinated: CDC Studies [View all]

'CDC Studies 'Breakthrough' COVID Cases Among People Already Vaccinated.' NPR, April 13, 2021. - Ed.

Ginger Eatman thought she was safe after getting her second COVID-19 vaccination in February. But she kept wearing her mask, using hand sanitizer and wiping down the carts at the grocery store anyway. A few weeks later, she noticed a scratchy throat. "By Wednesday morning, St. Patrick's Day, I was sick. I had congestion — a lot of congestion — and some coughing," says Eatman, 73, of Dallas, Ga. Her doctor thought her symptoms might be allergies. But Eatman started feeling sicker. And then she suddenly lost her sense of smell. She even tried her strong perfume. Nothing.

So Eatman got tested for the coronavirus. It came back positive. "I was shocked. I almost cried," she says. "It was like: No, that can't be." Eatman isn't alone in this experience. It's a long-recognized phenomenon called "vaccine breakthrough." "Essentially, these are cases that you see amongst vaccinated individuals during a period in which you expect the vaccines to work," says Dr. Saad Omer, a vaccine researcher at Yale University. This incomplete protection that some people experience occurs to some extent with a vaccine against any disease. The 3 vaccines authorized for use against COVID-19 in the U.S. appear to be at least 94% effective at preventing severe disease and death (starting about 2 weeks after a person is fully vaccinated), according to data reported so far, and about 80% effective at preventing infection.

But that's not 100%, Omer notes, so a relatively small number of infections despite immunization with these very effective vaccines is to be expected. "So the bottom line is: It's expected. No need to freak out," Omer says. So far, more than 74 million people have gotten fully vaccinated in the U.S. It's unclear how many have later gotten infected with the coronavirus anyway. But Michigan, Washington and other states have reported hundreds of cases. Most people have gotten only mildly ill, but some have gotten very sick. Some have even died. Still, at a recent White House briefing, Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health noted that such cases of lapses in full protection appear to be very rare. And the deaths seem to be happening primarily among frail elderly people who have other health problems.

"There's nothing there yet that's a red flag. We obviously are going to keep an eye on that very, very carefully. But I don't see anything that changes our concept of the vaccine and its efficacy," Fauci says. And it's definitely no reason for anyone not to get vaccinated. The opposite is true. "It would also appear the rare infections that occur are less severe, so it would also protect us against severe disease, which is great," says Dr. Francesca Torriani, an infectious disease researcher at the University of California San Diego, who has studied breakthrough infections among health care workers. But such cases are a reminder of why it's important for people to continue being vigilant after getting vaccinated, infectious disease experts say...

Read More, https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/04/13/986411423/a-mystery-under-study-how-why-and-when-covid-vaccines-arent-fully-protective

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