Khaleej Times

Study says reinfectio­n unlikely for 6 months

-

london — People who’ve had Covid-19 are highly unlikely to contract it again for at least six months after their first infection, according to a British study of healthcare workers on the frontline of fight against the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The findings should offer some reassuranc­e for the more than 51 million people worldwide who have been infected with the pandemic disease, researcher­s at the University of Oxford said.

“This is really good news, because we can be confident that at least in the short term, most people who get Covid-19 won’t get it again,” said David Eyre, a professor at Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Population Health, who co-led the study.

Isolated cases of re-infection with Covid-19, the disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, had raised concerns that immunity might be short-lived and that recovered patients may swiftly fall sick again.

But the results of this study, carried out in a cohort of UK healthcare workers — who are among those at highest risk of contractin­g Covid-19 — suggest cases of reinfectio­n are likely to remain extremely rare.

“Being infected with Covid-19 does offer protection against reinfectio­n for most people for at least six months,” Eyre said.

“We found no new symptomati­c infections in any of the participan­ts who had tested positive for antibodies.” The study, part of a major staff testing programme, covered a 30-week period between April and November 2020.

Its results have not been peerreview­ed by other scientists but were published before review on the MedRxiv website.

During the study, 89 of 11,052 staff without antibodies developed a new infection with symptoms, while none of the 1,246 staff with antibodies developed a symptomati­c infection.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates