Santa Fe New Mexican

Experts: ‘No way’ Texas has reached herd immunity

- By Denise Grady

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott may have been overly optimistic Sunday when he said on Fox News that his state could be “very close” to herd immunity — the point where so much of the population is immune to COVID-19, either from being vaccinated or previously infected, that the virus can no longer spread.

“When you look at the senior population, for example, more than 70 percent of our seniors have received a vaccine shot, more than 50 percent of those who are 50 to 65 have received a vaccine shot,” Abbott, a Republican, told Chris Wallace. Wallace had asked why statewide infection, hospitaliz­ation and death rates were more under control than in other states, despite Texas reopening many activities and eliminatin­g mask mandates.

“I don’t know what herd immunity is,” Abbott said, “but when you add that to the people who have immunity, it looks like it could be very close to herd immunity.”

Michael Osterholm, a public health researcher and director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, said, “There is no way on God’s green earth that Texas is anywhere even close to herd immunity.”

He added: “Look no further than Michigan and Minnesota, which have much higher rates of vaccinatio­n than Texas. And we’re already seeing widespread transmissi­on.”

About 19 percent of people in Texas are fully vaccinated, while the numbers are 22 percent in Michigan and 24 percent in Minnesota.

Estimates of what it would take to reach herd immunity have edged up since the pandemic began, ranging from requiring immunity in 60 percent to more than 90 percent of the population to halt transmissi­on.

“We don’t know” what the level really is, Osterholm said. “Anybody who will tell you exactly what the level of herd immunity is, is also likely to want to sell you a bridge.”

He predicted that within a few weeks or a month, Texas and other parts of the U.S. south and west would see rising case rates like the levels now occurring in the Upper Midwest and Northeast.

A major factor in the relentless spread of the virus is the increasing proportion of cases caused by the coronaviru­s variant first identified in Britain and known as B.1.1.7, which is more contagious than the form of the virus that first emerged.

 ?? LM OTERO/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Texas Gov. Greg Abbott speaks during a news conference last month. ‘I don’t know what herd immunity is,’ Abbott said Sunday on Fox News, ‘but when you add that to the people who have immunity, it looks like it could be very close to herd immunity.’
LM OTERO/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Texas Gov. Greg Abbott speaks during a news conference last month. ‘I don’t know what herd immunity is,’ Abbott said Sunday on Fox News, ‘but when you add that to the people who have immunity, it looks like it could be very close to herd immunity.’

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