Bangkok Post

85% of Indonesian­s have antibodies, says govt study

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JAKARTA: More than 85% of Indonesia’s population has antibodies against Covid-19, a government-commission­ed survey showed, but epidemiolo­gists warned it was not clear whether this immunity could help contain a fresh wave of coronaviru­s infections.

The survey, conducted between October and last month by researcher­s at the University of Indonesia, found Indonesian­s had developed antibodies from a combinatio­n of Covid-19 infections and vaccinatio­ns. Pandu Riono, an epidemiolo­gist involved in the survey that covered some 22,000 respondent­s, said the level of immunity could explain why there had not been a significan­t jump in infections since the middle of last year.

Indonesia’s second wave of infections — driven by the Delta variant — peaked in July and August, with infections plummeting from more than 50,000 a day to just a few hundred a day in recent months.

The antibodies may provide some protection against new variants, including the highly contagious Omicron, Dr Pandu said, though adding it would take months for this to become clear.

Omicron has infected more than 250 people in Indonesia, but most cases have been imported and a handful of local cases have not so far brought the type of surge recorded in many countries.

Dr Pandu said the survey did not negate a need for more people to be vaccinated, even those that had already been infected.

“The point is to have the majority of people develop a hybrid immunity to control the pandemic,” he said, referring to the stronger immunity among some people who are vaccinated and have also been infected.

Indonesia has only fully vaccinated just over 42% of its population.

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