Connecticut Post

Maintain diligence after vaccinatio­n

- Keith Roach, M.D. Readers may email questions to: ToYourGood­Health@med .cornell.edu or mail questions to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

Dear Dr. Roach: Could you please provide your recommenda­tions on how we should conduct ourselves after we get the COVID vaccine?

T.S.

Answer: Three vaccines are approved under an emergency authorizat­ion at the time of this writing: Two mRNA vaccines, made by Moderna and Pfizer, and the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which uses a different virus and DNA to “teach” our cells how to respond to COVID-19.

The available mRNA vaccines are both nearly 95% effective at preventing disease after two doses; the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine was 66% effective in preventing moderate to severe COVID-19 but 100% effective at preventing COVID-19-related hospitaliz­ation and death. This is very good protection, but given how prevalent the infection is throughout North America, exposure to the virus is very likely unless you take proper precaution­s. This includes maskwearin­g and hand-washing, but also avoiding high-risk exposures, such as eating indoors or being in a large group of unmasked people. Even those who had the vaccine can still get COVID: 66% and 95% are good, but not perfect. Also, that high protection takes time — two to three weeks after the full series.

A second issue is that we just aren’t sure whether the vaccine keeps people from being contagious. It may be that even people protected from COVID-19 illness may still be infectious for a time after they get exposed.

For these two reasons — protecting yourself from COVID-19 (imperfect vaccines) and protecting others (unknown protection against possible asymptomat­ic spread) — experts recommend continuing to take precaution­s. As more and more people get the vaccine, the pandemic will subside. As the prevalence decreases, life will return to normal, and masks and social distancing can be stopped. How soon that will be depends on how fast the population can be vaccinated, and how careful people are about masks and social distancing until then.

Dear Dr. Roach: You recently discussed a study showing that you may be better off taking your high blood pressure medication­s at night to prevent heart attacks and strokes the following morning. I am a 55-year-old on high blood pressure medication­s, and my wife asked an interestin­g follow-up question: Are we better off having sex in the evening rather than in the morning if heart attacks and strokes are more likely to occur in the morning?

G.M.

Answer: Heart attacks and strokes are indeed more likely in the morning. This may be due to hormonal changes or increased clotting risk in the morning, but there are other factors. However, there does not seem to be an increase in risk from morning exercise versus exercise at any other time of the day.

While regular exercise reduces the risk of having a heart attack, extreme levels of exertion — especially in sedentary, high-risk men — can precipitat­e heart attack or stroke. However, moderate exercise, such as from sexual activity, does not increase risk of a heart attack.

Couples who engage in regular sexual activity have a slightly lower risk of overall mortality. You should engage in sexual activity whenever it’s best for you, without worrying about any consequenc­es on your heart.

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