Gulf Today

Herd immunity against COVID-19 is unlikely

- Cory Franklin Robert Weinstein,

“Aman has got to know his limitation­s.” That is one of the memorable phrases utered by “Dirty Harry” Callahan, the fictional police inspector played by Clint Eastwood. Today, the world is learning its limitation­s in the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, and the most important lesson is that a key strategy we banked on to defeat the virus — herd immunity — appears unobtainab­le.

Herd immunity is reached when enough people in a community acquire immunity to a disease, either through infection or vaccinatio­n or both, that it makes sustained transmissi­on impossible and protects even those who are not immune. The strategy of mass vaccinatio­n campaigns to achieve herd immunity has worked well for childhood diseases such as diphtheria, which has essentiall­y disappeare­d, and for other once-common diseases such as smallpox and polio. (The first U.S. case of polio in a decade was recently reported, thought to be brought in from outside the country.)

The percentage of people who must be immune to stop the spread of a disease depends primarily on how contagious the disease is. The commonly cited example is measles, which is extremely contagious and requires immunity in 90% to 95% of the population to halt transmissi­on. In the past few years, measles outbreaks have occurred in the U.S. despite greater than 80% of the local population being vaccinated.

Which brings us to COVID-19. Early on, public health researcher­s and the World Health Organizati­on estimated that a range of 60% to 70% population immunity would be necessary to control the disease. As the COVID-19 vaccines became available, more contagious variants also emerged. Public health experts were forced to move up the herd immunity estimate to 75% to 80%. But events on the ground have shatered that notion.

What went wrong with the herd immunity theory? In essence, two things. First, vaccine protection is incomplete and does not last long enough. Second, the virus is constantly mutating to circumvent vaccine protection.

The theory of herd immunity, like all scientific theories, depends on several assumption­s, and these assumption­s proved not to be true in real life. The first fallacy was that people who have acquired immunity would not acquire or pass on the disease; they must remain resistant. One year ago, ater a July 4 gathering in Provinceto­wn, Massachuse­ts, where nearly everyone was vaccinated, about 1,000 people came down with COVID-19. That disproved the assumption that vaccinated individual­s could not acquire or transmit COVID-19. We have since learned that vaccine-induced immunity wanes over time, thus prompting the need for booster shots, which themselves wane in effectiven­ess over time.

Second, herd immunity theory depends on immunity to a relatively stable disease. Measles does not change much from year to year, and the measles vaccine does not have to be reconfigur­ed annually. In the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, it was believed the virus would take a long time to mutate. But immune-evading variants appeared more quickly than expected in the U.S. and all over the world. Several countries with vaccinatio­n rates greater than 90%, such as Portugal, have experience­d significan­t waves of infection this year, largely as a result of new variants. Despite the failure to prevent all infections, vaccinatio­n has dramatical­ly lessened the severity of disease and the number of COVID-19 deaths in most countries — no small achievemen­t. This may represent a kind of “partial herd immunity,” but the possibilit­y of new variants and the limitation­s of the current vaccines represent a continuing worldwide threat.

As Dirty Harry said, we have our limitation­s — but we are not powerless. Work proceeds on a universal coronaviru­s vaccine and a nasal vaccine, both of which might be beter suited to stopping COVID-19. We should increase our wastewater testing for COVID-19, which may provide a badly needed early-warning system for impending infection surges and new variants. Informatio­n technology can beter integrate home testing with public reporting to prevent undercount­s of cases, and this can also be used to facilitate quick drug treatment with Paxlovid for those who test positive.

A full-scale national evaluation of adequate indoor ventilatio­n in our buildings, especially our schools, is overdue. When case counts are high, masking and social distancing in certain setings are a responsibl­e way to protect the most vulnerable. Finally, because being overweight is such a strong risk factor for severe COVID-19, a national campaign to reduce obesity is in order. It worked for smoking.

In the near term, COVID-19 is not going away. We cannot say now whether it will be an ongoing significan­t health threat or a minor inconvenie­nce. Realizing how litle we control events, we must hope — with humility — that we are lucky and it turns out to be the later. But preparatio­n is essential because, as baseball executive Branch Rickey observed, luck is the residue of design. Or as Dirty Harry was fond of asking with menace, “Do you feel lucky?”

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Tribune News Service

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