Hartford Courant

Vaccine can still save your life

- By Cathy O’neil Bloomberg Opinion Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

The battle lines in the war on COVID19 have been getting blurrier, as infections surge and studies offer changing and sometimes conflictin­g data on how much protection vaccines provide. Amid the fog, we mustn’t lose sight of a crucial truth: Vaccines still work, and they’re still a miracle.

Not long ago, the goal seemed clear: If enough people achieved immunity through vaccinatio­n or infection, the pandemic would peter out for lack of targets. Now that herd immunity seems ever more distant. The delta variant’s enhanced transmissi­bility has raised the bar. The virus still roams freely in places with low vaccinatio­n rates. Isolation-weary people are heading out and taking their chances. As school restarts and new variants emerge, the situation is likely to get worse.

Meanwhile, the most crucial data points about vaccines — how well they protect against hospitaliz­ation and death — are in flux. Early in the vaccinatio­n drive, the chances of an inoculated person dying of COVID-19 appeared to be about one in a million. Delta has probably driven that up somewhat, but a dearth of adequate informatio­n makes it difficult to say by how much.

News stories tend to freak people out by focusing on breakthrou­gh cases, in which people get COVID-19 despite vaccines. Most official data cover the whole period since vaccinatio­ns began, so they obscure the more recent effect of delta. Just looking at the share of vaccinated among the hospitaliz­ed and dead isn’t great, either: If everyone were vaccinated, it would be 100%.

In the absence of good data, the message about vaccines keeps getting foggier. The informatio­n that filters through often ends up providing fodder for anti-vaxxers. What people hear is, don’t bother getting vaccinated because you can still get COVID-19 and even die. What’s needed is a reporting system that would allow the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to calculate Covid-related hospitaliz­ation and death rates among the vaccinated and the unvaccinat­ed on a regular basis, at the state and national level. With, say, weekly or daily reporting on cases per 100,000 people, it would be easier to see whether and by how much delta and other emerging variants were actually wearing down the vaccines’ most important protection­s.

One recent study done in Los Angeles County, California, offers a glimpse of what such reporting might show. Looking at cases from May 1 through July 25, when delta was already circulatin­g, it found that unvaccinat­ed people were 29 times more likely than vaccinated people to end up in the hospital with COVID-19 infections.

So vaccines are still effective, miraculous­ly so. Getting inoculated can save your life, and certainly justifies living more like normal. The message needs to get through.

 ?? APU GOMES/AFP ?? A 45-year-old intubated COVID-19 patient, who received his first vaccine two days before he became ill, lies on a bed Sept. 2 at a hospital in Tarzana, Calif.
APU GOMES/AFP A 45-year-old intubated COVID-19 patient, who received his first vaccine two days before he became ill, lies on a bed Sept. 2 at a hospital in Tarzana, Calif.

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