Royal Oak Tribune

What does vaccine effectiven­ess mean?

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What does COVID-19 vaccine effectiven­ess mean?

It refers to the likelihood that a coronaviru­s shot will work in people.

Two vaccine makers have said that preliminar­y results from their late-stage studies suggest their experiment­al vaccines are strongly protective. Moderna this week said its vaccine appears nearly 95% effective. This comes on the heels of Pfizer’s announceme­nt that its shot appeared similarly effective.

Those numbers raised hopes around the world that vaccines could help put an end to the pandemic sometime next year if they continue to show that they prevent disease and are safe.

Effectiven­ess numbers will change as the vaccine studies continue since the early calculatio­ns were based on fewer than 100 COVID-19 cases in each study. But early results provide strong signals that the vaccine could prevent a majority of disease when large groups of people are vaccinated.

U.S. health officials said a coronaviru­s vaccine would need to be at least 50% effective before they would consider approving it for use. There was concern that coronaviru­s vaccines might be only as effective as flu vaccines, which have ranged from 20% to 60% effective in recent years.

The broad, early effectiven­ess figures don’t tell the whole story. Scientists also need to understand how well the vaccine protects people in different age groups and demographi­c categories.

For both vaccines, the interim results were based on people who had COVID-19 symptoms that prompted a virus test. That means we don’t know yet whether someone who’s vaccinated might still get infected — even if they show no symptoms — and spread the virus.

Also unknown is whether the shots will give lasting protection, or whether boosters will be required.

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