Kashmir Observer

Unvaccinat­ed People Increase Covid-19 Risk For Those Who Are Vaccinated: Study

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Unvaccinat­ed people threaten the safety of those who are vaccinated against Covid-19 even when the immunisati­on rates are high, according to a modelling study published on Monday.

Researcher­s from the University of Toronto in Canada used a simple model to explore the effect of mixing between unvaccinat­ed and vaccinated people to understand the dynamics of an infectious disease like SARSCoV-2.

They simulated mixing of like-with-like population­s in which people have exclusive contact with others of the same vaccinatio­n status as well as random mixing between different groups.

"Many opponents of vaccine mandates have framed vaccine adoption as a matter of individual choice," said David Fisman, from Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto. "However, we found that the choices made by people who forgo vaccinatio­n contribute disproport­ionately to risk among those who do get vaccinated," Fisman said in a statement.

The study, published in Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal, found that the risk to vaccinated people was lower when unvaccinat­ed mixed with unvaccinat­ed. However, when vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed people mixed, a substantia­l number of new infections would occur in vaccinated people, even in scenarios where immunisati­on rates were high.

The findings remained stable even when they modelled lower levels of vaccine effectiven­ess for prevention of infection, such as in those who have not received a booster dose or with new SARS-CoV-2 variants. The findings may be relevant to future waves of SARS-CoV-2 or to the behaviour of new variants, according to the researcher­s. "Risk among unvaccinat­ed people cannot be considered self-regarding. In other words, forgoing vaccinatio­n can't be considered to affect only the unvaccinat­ed, but also those around them," the authors of the study noted. "Considerat­ions around equity and justice for people who do choose to be vaccinated, as well as those who choose not to be, need to be considered in the formulatio­n of vaccinatio­n policy," they said.

The researcher­s noted that the anti-vaccine sentiment, fuelled in part by organised disinforma­tion efforts, has resulted in suboptimal uptake of readily available vaccines in many countries, with adverse health and economic consequenc­es.

Although the decision not to receive vaccinatio­n is often framed in terms of the rights of individual­s to opt out, such arguments neglect the potential harms to the wider community that derive from poor vaccine uptake, they added.

We found that the choices made by people who forgo vaccinatio­n contribute disproport­ionately to risk among those who do get vaccinated

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