National Post

Israel study shows protection after 1 dose

- James Rothwell

JERUSALEM • Early studies in Israel have found that coronaviru­s vaccines can reduce infection rates by up to 60 per cent in those who have received their first jab, but the country’s health minister stressed there was still a need for extreme caution.

Preliminar­y research by health-care provider Maccabi said the first dose reduced the risk of catching the virus by 60 per cent after 14 days, according to Israeli broadcaste­r Channel 12.

A similar study by Clalit, another Israeli health-care provider, put the figure somewhat lower at 33 per cent after testing 200,000 citizens who had received their first vaccinatio­n.

In an interview, yuli edelstein, the country’s health minister, said Israelis needed to stay vigilant, however, as there was still a risk of catching the virus within two weeks of receiving a jab.

“Those who are getting the first shot should still be very, very cautious about their behaviour, due to the partial resistance to the disease,” edelstein said.

“In my imaginatio­n, it’s like the scene from the movie where you nearly escape the danger, and at the very last moment you catch a bullet.”

The findings will raise hopes that the vaccines cannot only protect people from coronaviru­s but also stop them from spreading it, though Israeli officials stressed it was too early to be sure at this stage.

The Clalit study compared test results for the vaccinated group of 200,000 people with a sample of 200,000 Israelis who had not received the vaccine. The full details of the studies have not yet been published or peer reviewed.

“The graphs diverge on day 14 with a 33 per cent decline among the vaccinated elderly, without a similar trend among the unvaccinat­ed,” ran Balicer, the founding director of the Clalit research Institute, said.

Israel has already given the first coronaviru­s jab to more than two million people — around 20 per cent of its population — as part of the world’s fastest vaccinatio­ns program.

The campaign focuses on elderly Israelis and those with underlying health conditions but was updated this week to include the over50s.

however, the rate of infection remains high in Israel, breaking a new daily record of 9,500 on Monday, as the country grapples with its third nationwide lockdown.

 ?? JALAA Marey / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Israeli researcher­s claim the first dose reduced
the risk of catching the virus by 60 per cent
after 14 days.
JALAA Marey / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Israeli researcher­s claim the first dose reduced the risk of catching the virus by 60 per cent after 14 days.

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