Marin Independent Journal

VACCINATED? MASK UP

Why we'll still need to wear masks after getting a COVID-19 vaccine

- By Grace Dickinson »

The country’s first coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns are now being distribute­d. The FDA granted the Pfizer and Moderna vaccine emergency authorizat­ion for use. In trials, the Pfizer vaccine was 95% effective in preventing COVID-19, and the Moderna vaccine stands at 94%, both significan­tly more effective than many scientists anticipate­d.

“This is close to the gold standard of all vaccines, the measles vaccine,” says Eric Sachinwall­a, medical director of Infection Prevention and Control at Einstein Medical Center Philadelph­ia, noting that the MMR vaccine used to prevent measles is about 97% effective.

Both versions of the vaccine require two injections. If you get them both, your chances of getting infected with the coronaviru­s are likely low. But even if you get vaccinated in the near future, experts say it’ll be months until you can ditch the masks and hug everyone around you.

• Why we have to continue to wear masks The main challenge? Studies of the COVID-19 vaccines only measured whether vaccinated people developed symptoms, not whether they got infected. We know that you can become infected with the corona

virus and be asymptomat­ic, meaning you never develop symptoms. Asymptomat­ic people can still spread COVID-19 to others. So we don’t know whether a vaccine prevents asymptomat­ic infections and if there’s still the possibilit­y that a vaccinated person could transmit the virus without knowing it.

“The vaccine is probably the most important tool we have right now in controllin­g this pandemic, but it’s not perfect and it’s not a magic bullet that can end this for good right away,” says Neal Goldstein, assistant research professor of epidemiolo­gy and biostatist­ics at Drexel University.

We wear masks for two reasons: to protect ourselves, and to protect others. Because there’s still a chance that you could be a silent carrier even after getting vaccinated, wearing a mask, practicing social distancing, and handwashin­g all remain important.

• How is it possible to be vaccinated but potentiall­y carry the coronaviru­s?

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines work by generating a body-wide immune response. They are injected deep into the muscles and travel through the bloodstrea­m where the body creates antibodies and other types of white blood cells important for immunity.

“For a respirator­y germ, like SARS- CoV-2, , the point of entry into the body is through the respirator­y tract, predominan­tly nose and mouth,” says Goldstein. “An important question is whether the vaccines elicit a strong immune response at these locations, , or the immune system destroys the virus elsewhere in the body.”

Researcher­s are trying to figure out whether you could still carry the virus in your respirator­y tract, even if you’re protected from getting sick. In theory, it’s possible not enough antibodies will circulate in the blood to the mucosa, the moist tissue that lines the nose and mouth. In this case, the virus could potentiall­y live in your respirator­y tract, but not make you sick because your body is fending it off elsewhere. If it does remain in your mouth or nose, this means you could sneeze, cough, or breathe out contagious virus particles and still infect others. But the answer is still unknown.

There’s also the rare chance that you get vaccinated and still end up getting sick. While the two front-runners are “close to being perfect,” says Goldstein, no vaccine is 100% effective, which means there’s always the chance you could still get infected. But again, that’s uncommon, and the more people who get vaccinated, the less easily the virus can spread.

“As long as you have enough people who are vaccinated, then if in the odd chance someone gets infected, there are very few susceptibl­e people to spread it to,” explains Sachinwall­a.

• So, when can we say goodbye to masks?

Experts estimate that around 70% of the population — more than 200 million people — in the U. S. would need to gain immunity, either from coronaviru­s infection or a vaccine, for the pandemic to end. The general public is not expected to have access to vaccines until spring.

“It’s going to take months, not weeks, but at the same time also not years, until we can end these mitigation measures. Not everyone can get vaccinated, not everyone will get vaccinated, and we’re still learning about the vaccinatio­n, so everything else we’ve been doing all along is still so important,” says Goldstein.

By mid-2021, experts predict we’ll know enough about how well this vaccine is blocking infections at a population level to determine when we can start scaling back on mitigation measures. As for when we’ll actually say goodbye to masks and social distancing all together?

“My optimistic view on this is by December 2021,” says Goldstein. “The big unknown is whether the public will accept and get the vaccine — both doses — in sufficient numbers.”

Sachinwall­a agrees that getting the public to accept the vaccine is crucial. And you need both doses, spaced three weeks (Pfizer) to four weeks ( Moderna) apart, to get the maximum protection. A recent published study showed the Pfizer vaccine efficacy was 52% after the first dose and didn’t reach 95% until after the second.

Sachinwall­a’s best guess for when we can stop wearing masks presents a slightly shorter timeline.

“I’m hoping sometime this summer, assuming we get good vaccine uptake in the community and it works as well as these initial studies have suggested,” he says.

 ?? BRIAN ASARE — UNSPLASH ?? Because there’s still a chance that you could be a silent carrier even after getting vaccinated for COVID-19, wearing a mask, practicing social distancing, and handwashin­g all remain important.
BRIAN ASARE — UNSPLASH Because there’s still a chance that you could be a silent carrier even after getting vaccinated for COVID-19, wearing a mask, practicing social distancing, and handwashin­g all remain important.

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