USA TODAY US Edition

Why a vaccine won’t mean ‘normality’ anytime soon

It will take months to get pandemic under control

- Karen Weintraub

The good news is we might have a vaccine by New Year’s. The bad news is that rolling it out to everyone who wants it will take months – and it won’t fix everything.

A COVID-19 vaccine is likely to be authorized before the end of the year, but that doesn’t mean you’ll be able to throw away your mask anytime soon.

Rolling out a vaccine to everyone who wants one will take months in the U.S., not to mention the rest of the world.

And while vaccines are essential tools for fighting a pandemic like COVID-19, they don’t fix everything.

“People shouldn’t think of vaccines as the savior,” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia and a professor of vaccinolog­y at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “Vaccines are, along with hygienic measures, a way to get in control of this virus, but we need both. Vaccines are not going to be magical. ... You can’t abandon one in favor of the other.”

How quickly life will get back to normal will depend on a number of factors, public health experts say, including the vaccine’s effectiven­ess, how many people are willing to get it and how quickly, and how much the virus is still raging out of control.

“There is an end to this,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. But it will require effort on the part of the public to continue wearing masks, maintainin­g distance from others, avoiding crowds – and being willing to get a vaccine.

“If you have a very, very highly effective vaccine and we convince most of the people in the country to take the vaccine, we could get back to a degree of normality maybe by the end of 2021,” Fauci said.

Even if a vaccine is approved this year, there won’t be enough available to change the course of the pandemic for months, said Samuel Scarpino, an assistant professor at Northeaste­rn University in Boston, who directs the school’s Emergent Epidemics Lab.

Companies already have begun making hundreds of millions of doses of their candidate vaccines, anticipati­ng approval (and ready to throw out those same doses if their vaccine doesn’t prove safe or effective enough).

The government has promised a smooth rollout across the country, starting immediatel­y after a thumbs-up from the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. Pfizer, which is producing the frontrunni­ng vaccine candidate, has said it will ask later this month for FDA authorizat­ion. It’s not clear how long the FDA will take to comb through the mountains of required paperwork, but many expect approval before the end of the year.

Still, it will take a while before enough doses are delivered to a drug store or clinic convenient for the vast majority of Americans. Health care workers fighting COVID-19 will get first dibs on a vaccine, followed by first responders and the frail elderly.

“We all want our lives back,” said Dr. Mary Bassett, director of the FXB Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University and a former New York City health commission­er. “The vaccine won’t achieve that because it can’t be distribute­d widely enough, fast enough.”

Then there’s the question of how many people will take a vaccine. There’s a lot of hesitancy at the moment; the percentage of people saying they’d take a vaccine fell substantia­lly from May to September.

Public health experts hope much of that hesitation will go away after a vaccine has been shown safe and effective.

“There’s a famous line in the vaccine world that says, ‘Vaccines don’t save people, but vaccinatio­ns do,’” said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, a professor at Harvard Medical School and an infectious disease physician at Massachuse­tts General Hospital, both in Boston.

The FDA has said vaccines must work at least half the time to win approval – though early signs are that they will be much more effective than that. In its first release of effectiven­ess data, the candidate made by Pfizer and BioNTech proved 90% effective against COVID-19.

But even if everyone got a vaccine that effective, 1 out of 10 wouldn’t be protected against COVID-19. It’s impossible to know for certain who is protected until an infection proves they’re not.

That’s why experts say that roughly 70% of the population will need to be vaccinated to provide so-called herd immunity.

With measles, which is more contagious than COVID-19, that figure is about 90%, and there have been outbreaks in recent years in communitie­s where the vaccinatio­n rate has fallen below that level.

Plus, it’s not clear how long vaccine protection lasts.

Vaccine developers are hoping for at least one to two years. But a small number of people have already contracted COVID-19 a second time, and protection against the common cold, which often comes from a related coronaviru­s, lasts only about six months, studies have shown.

Vaccine experts have said they expect vaccines to provide longer protection than a natural infection, but it’s too soon to know.

The possibilit­y of a short period of protection from a natural infection also means the public is unlikely to achieve herd immunity from infections, experts said.

Despite its rapid spread in the spring, only about 10% of Americans had been exposed to the coronaviru­s by late summer. And without long-term protection, those who were infected will remain vulnerable and will have to continue wearing masks and taking other health precaution­s.

Herd immunity won’t become a reality until vaccines can reach the majority of Americans who want them – which could take half a year or more.

Dr. Peter Hotez, pediatrici­an and dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, said recently he’d get a vaccine regardless of its effectiven­ess. Even if it isn’t perfect, it could give him extra antibodies to fight off disease, said Hotez, noting that at age 62, he’s in a higher-risk category.

“If it’s not durable, at least I’ve got some level of neutralizi­ng antibody on board and then can get boosted later,” he said in a recent webinar. “To give yourself the best chance over the next year, you want some neutralizi­ng antibodies and T cell responses in your body.”

To really get out of this mess will require a combinatio­n of factors: vaccines, testing, behaviors – and patience.

With the epidemic out of control in most of the U.S., now is not the time to be waiting passively for a vaccine, Fauci and others have said. The best weapons remain masks, social distancing, hand washing and avoiding crowds.

“Those are the tools that we’re going to use as a whole to get this pandemic under control,” Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases, told state officials Monday. “We’ll certainly look forward to a time when we’re not required to keep up those precaution­s. But that day is certainly not now.”

“We all want our lives back. The vaccine won’t achieve that, because it can’t be distribute­d widely enough, fast enough.” Dr. Mary Bassett FXB Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University

Health and patient safety coverage is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competitio­n in Healthcare. The foundation does not provide editorial input.

 ?? RYAN GARZA/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? One out of 10 people who get a vaccine may not be protected, so 70% of people will need doses to provide so-called herd immunity.
RYAN GARZA/USA TODAY NETWORK One out of 10 people who get a vaccine may not be protected, so 70% of people will need doses to provide so-called herd immunity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States