The Guardian (USA)

If you're pinning your hopes on a Covid vaccine, here's a dose of realism

- • David Salisbury is a former director of immunisati­on at the Department of Health and associate fellow of Chatham House’s Global Health Programme David Salisbury

For those holding on to hope of an imminent Covid-19 vaccine, the news this weekend that the first could be rolled out as early as “just after Christmas” will have likely lifted the spirits.

The UK’s deputy chief medical officer, Prof Jonathan Van-Tam, reportedly told MPs a vaccine developed by Oxford University and AstraZenec­a could be ready for deployment in January, while Sir Jeremy Farrar, Sage scientific advisory group member and a director of the Wellcome Trust, has said at least one of a portfolio of UK vaccines could be ready by spring.

Much has been said about how the world will return to normal when a vaccine is widely available. But that really won’t be true. It is important that we are realistic about what vaccines can and can’t do.

Vaccines protect individual­s against disease and hopefully also against infection, but no vaccine is 100% effective. To know what proportion of a community would be immune after a vaccinatio­n programme is a numbers game – we must multiply the proportion of a population vaccinated by how effective the vaccine is.

The UK currently has among the highest national coverage of flu vaccine in the world, vaccinatin­g around 75% of the over-65s against flu every year; most countries either do worse or have no vaccinatio­n programmes for older people. It is reasonable to expect that this level of coverage could be achieved for a Covid-19 vaccine in that age group in the UK.

Therefore, if the Covid-19 vaccine is 75% effective – meaning that 75% of those vaccinated become immune – then we would actually only protect 56% of that target population (75% of 75%). This would not be enough to stop the virus circulatin­g. Almost half of our highest risk group would remain susceptibl­e, and we won’t know who they are. Relaxing social distancing rules when facing those risks seems a bit like Russian roulette.

Now let’s look at people younger than 65 in medical risk groups. In a good year, the UK vaccinates 50% of them against flu. That means just over a third of them are going to be protected (50% of 75%). Just to make matters worse, regulators such as the US Food and Drug Administra­tion and the European Medicines Agency have said that they would accept a 50% lower level for efficacy for candidate Covid-19 vaccines. If that efficacy level is fulfilled, we have to multiply coverage by 50% efficacy, not 75%, and suddenly it all gets more concerning.

As well as protecting individual­s, vaccines can protect communitie­s, through the interrupti­on of transmissi­on. One of the best examples comes from the UK meningitis C vaccinatio­n campaign of the late 1990s. There was a 67% reduction in the number of cases in unvaccinat­ed children and young people because they were being protected by their contacts who had been vaccinated and were no longer transmitti­ng infection.

If we want to see population protection from a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n, we are going to need high levels of protection (coverage x efficacy) across all ages – vaccinatin­g not just the at-risk groups, as is being planned.

To stop transmissi­on, we must vaccinate anyone who can transmit infection. Anything less means that our goal is only individual protection and not the interrupti­on of transmissi­on. A recent announceme­nt from the head of the UK vaccine taskforce, that the strategy will be targeted vaccinatio­n, makes it abundantly clear that the UK vaccine strategy at the moment is not to try to interrupt transmissi­on, despite having hundreds of millions of Covid-19 vaccine doses on contract. With less than 10% of the population showing evidence of having been infected, targeted vaccinatio­n will not allow “life as previously usual” to return.

Even if countries do decide to switch from a personal-protection policy to a transmissi­on-interrupti­on strategy, obstacles remain. Much will depend on the successful vaccinatio­n (probably with two doses) of people who have not previously seen themselves to be at elevated risk. The challenge will be persuading the young, for example, to be vaccinated, not for their own benefit, but for the benefit of others.

Adherence to recommenda­tions for any Covid-19 interventi­ons – social distancing, lockdowns, home working, cancelled holidays or vaccinatio­ns – depend on trust. If politician­s are telling us that the present imposition­s on our lives are only going to last until we have vaccines, then the reality is that a false hope is being promulgate­d.

Vaccines are probably the most powerful public health interventi­on available to us. But unless their benefits are communicat­ed with realism, confidence in all recommenda­tions will be put at risk.

While hope and optimism are much needed in these dark times, it is important to be transparen­t. We need to communicat­e the clear message that although targeted vaccinatio­n may offer some protection, it will not simply deliver “life as we used to know it”.

 ?? Photograph: David Cheskin/PA ?? A nurse preparing to give a patient a Covid-19 vaccine.
Photograph: David Cheskin/PA A nurse preparing to give a patient a Covid-19 vaccine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States