The Oklahoman

How will we know we've reached herd immunity?

- By Candice Choi and Aniruddha Ghosal

Health officials around the world are racing to vaccinate enough people to stop the spread of COVID-19, but what qualifies as “enough” is still an open question.

The goal is to get to “herd immunity ,” which is when enough people have immunity, either from vaccinatio­n or a past infection, to stop uncontroll­ed spread.

Herd immunity doesn' t make any one person immune, and outbreaks can still flare up. It means that a virus is no longer easily jumping from person to person, helping to protect those who are still vulnerable to catching it.

Nobody knows for sure what the herd immunity threshold is for the coronaviru­s, though many experts say i t's 70% or higher. And the emergence of variants is further complicati­ng the picture.

Here's what's known about the virus and herd immunity.

HOW IS THE HERD IMMUNITY THRESHOLD CALCULATED?

It's a formula based on how contagious a virus is — or how many people catch the virus from one infected person, on average.

But the calculatio­n offers only a broad target for when there might be a big drop off in spread. The figure could also vary by region.

“It's not 64.9 is terrible and 70.1 is fantastic ,” said Dr. Walter Orenstein, an infectious disease expert at Emory University.

Orenstein notes vaccinatio­n levels and other factors that affect spread could differ even within a city.

HOW DO WE KNOW WE'VE REACHED HERD IMMUNITY?

Proof t hat we're nearing herd immunity would be a “disruption in the chain of transmissi­on,” said Ashley St. John, who studies immune systems at Duke-N US Medical School at Singapore.

But don' t wait for any big declaratio­n that we've reached that milestone.

To determine whether to relax restrictio­ns, health officials will be watching infection and hospitaliz­ation trends as vaccinatio­ns roll out. And those decisions are likely to begin long before the ideal herd immunity threshold is reached, though they will be gradual and vary by region.

In India, for instance, scientists believe that more people will need to be protected in densely populated cities, where the virus spreads faster, than in its vast countrysid­e.

India plans to look for antibodies in people nationally to figure out what percentage of i ts nearly 1.4 billion people have already been infected, said Dr. Jayaprakas­h Muliyil, who is advising the government on virus surveillan­ce.

Vaccine effectiven­ess also plays a role. Fewer people need to be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity if the shots have higher efficacy.

HOW DO CORONAVIRU­S VARIANTS AFFECT HERD IMMUNITY?

It depends on the protection that past infection or vaccinatio­n gives you from the variant.

If vaccines were to prove notably less effective against a variant, it would require vaccinatin­g an even greater portion of the population or updating existing vaccines to make them more effective, Orenstein said.

So far, it appears the shots provide at least some protection from the most worrisome variants. But scientists are still studying the situation, and worry about further mutations.

The variants have underscore­d the importance of vaccinatin­g people as quickly as possible. Slowing transmissi­on is critical since viruses can mutate when they infect people.

DOES HERD IMMUNITY HAVE TO BE GLOBAL?

Global herd immunity is ideal but unlikely.

Rich nations have reserved most vaccines t hat will be manufactur­ed this year. In the U.S., for example, officials have said enough people could be vaccinated by fall to start to return to normal.

But many poorer countries will likely have to wait longer. This is why the World Health Organizati­on has warned that global herd immunity is unlikely to be achieved this year.

Difference­s in vaccinatio­n levels among countries are also why many experts believe the virus will never be completely stamped out.

 ?? [ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? People wearing protective masks to help curb the spread of the coronaviru­s walk along pedestrian crossings Jan. 8 in the Ginza shipping area of Tokyo.
[ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] People wearing protective masks to help curb the spread of the coronaviru­s walk along pedestrian crossings Jan. 8 in the Ginza shipping area of Tokyo.

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