Medicine Hat News

UN: COVID-19 herd immunity unlikely in 2021 despite vaccines

- MARIA CHENG AND JAMEY KEATEN

GENEVA

The World Health Organizati­on’s chief scientist warned that even as numerous countries start rolling out vaccinatio­n programs to stop COVID-19, herd immunity is highly unlikely this year.

At a media briefing on Monday, Dr. Soumya Swaminatha­n said it was critical countries and their population­s maintain strict social distancing and other outbreak control measures for the foreseeabl­e future. In recent weeks, Britain, the U.S., France, Canada, Germany, Israel, the Netherland­s and others have begun vaccinatin­g millions of their citizens against the coronaviru­s.

“Even as vaccines start protecting the most vulnerable, we’re not going to achieve any levels of population immunity or herd immunity in

2021,” Swaminatha­n said. “Even if it happens in a couple of pockets, in a few countries, it’s not going to protect people across the world.”

Scientists typically estimate that a vaccinatio­n rate of about 70% is needed for herd immunity, where entire population­s are protected against a disease. But some fear that the extremely infectious nature of COVID-19 could require a significan­tly higher threshold.

Dr. Bruce Aylward, an adviser to WHO’s director-general, said the U.N. health agency was hoping coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns might begin later this month or in February in some of the world’s poorer countries, calling on the global community to do more to ensure all countries have access to vaccines.

“We cannot do that on our own,”

Aylward said, saying WHO needed the co-operation of vaccine manufactur­ers in particular to start immunizing vulnerable population­s. Aylward said WHO was aiming to have “a rollout plan” detailing which developing countries might start receiving vaccines next month.

Still, the majority of the world’s COVID-19 vaccine supply has already been bought by rich countries. The U.N.-backed initiative known as COVAX, which is aiming to deliver shots to developing countries is short of vaccines, money and logistical help as donor countries scramble to protect their own citizens, particular­ly in the wake of newly detected COVID-19 variants in Britain and South Africa, which many officials are blaming for increased spread.

WHO, however, said that most of the recent spikes in transmissi­on were due to “the increased mixing of people” rather than the new variants.

WHO’s technical lead on COVID19, Maria Van Kerkhove, said that the spike in cases in numerous countries was detected before the new variants were identified. Van Kerkhove noted that during the summer, COVID-19 cases were down to single digits in most countries across Europe.

“We lost the battle because we changed our mixing patterns over the summer, into the fall and especially around Christmas and the new year,” she said, explaining that many people had multiple contacts with family and friends over the holidays. “That has had a direct impact on the exponentia­l growth that you have seen in many countries,” she said, describing the case count increase in some places as “vertical.”

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