Albuquerque Journal

CDC shifts pandemic goals from herd immunity

Focus now on raising the vaccinatio­n rate

- BY MELISSA HEALY

Since the earliest days of the pandemic, there has been one collective goal for bringing it to an end: achieving herd immunity. That’s when so many people are immune to a virus that it runs out of potential hosts, causing an outbreak to sputter out.

Many Americans embraced the novel farmyard phrase and, with it, the projection that once 70% to 80% or 85% of the population was vaccinated against COVID-19, the virus would go away and the pandemic would be over.

Now the herd is restless. And experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have set aside herd immunity as a national goal.

The prospects for meeting a clear herd-immunity target are “very complicate­d,” said Dr. Jefferson Jones, a medical officer on the CDC’s COVID-19 Epidemiolo­gy Task Force.

“Thinking that we’ll be able to achieve some kind of threshold where there’ll be no more transmissi­on of infections may not be possible,” Jones acknowledg­ed last week to members of a panel that advises the CDC on vaccines.

Vaccines have been quite effective at preventing cases of COVID-19 that lead to severe illness and death, but none has proved reliable at blocking transmissi­on of the virus, Jones noted. Recent evidence has also made clear that the immunity provided by vaccines can wane in months.

The result is that, even if vaccinatio­n were universal, the coronaviru­s would probably continue to spread. “We would discourage” thinking in terms of “a strict goal,” he said.

To Dr. Oliver Brooks, a member of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices, it was a sobering new message with potentiall­y worrisome effects.

With just 58.5% of all Americans fully vaccinated, “we do need to increase” the uptake of COVID-19 shots, said Brooks, chief medical officer of Watts Healthcare in Los Angeles. Unfortunat­ely, he said, Jones’ unexpected admission “almost makes you less motivated to get more people vaccinated.”

Brooks said he worries that, as the CDC backs off a specific target for herd immunity, it will take the air out of efforts to run up vaccinatio­n levels.

And if public health officials stop talking about the “herd,” people may lose sight of the fact that vaccinatio­n is not just an act of personal protection, but a way to protect the community.

A public tack away from the promise of herd immunity may also further undermine the CDC’s credibilit­y when it comes to fighting the coronaviru­s.

On issues ranging from the use of masks to how the virus spreads, the agency has made some dramatic about-faces over the course of the pandemic, prompted by new scientific discoverie­s about how the novel virus behaves. But they’ve also provided ample fuel for COVID-19 skeptics.

“It’s a science-communicat­ions problem,” said Dr. John Brooks, chief medical officer for the CDC’s COVID-19 response.

“We said, based on our experience with other diseases, that, when you get up to 70% to 80%, you often get herd immunity,” he said. But the SARS-CoV-2 virus didn’t get the memo.

“It has a lot of tricks up its sleeve and it’s repeatedly challenged us,” he said. “It’s impossible to predict what herd immunity will be in a new pathogen until you reach herd immunity.”

The CDC’s new approach will reflect this uncertaint­y. Instead of specifying a vaccinatio­n target that promises to end the pandemic, public health officials hope to redefine success in terms of new infections and deaths — and they’ll surmise that herd immunity has been achieved when both remain low for a sustained period.

“We want clean, easy answers … ,” John Brooks said. “But, on this one, we’re still learning.”

Herd immunity was never as simple as many Americans made it out to be, said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and an expert on the challenges of communicat­ing science to increasing­ly skeptical — and often conspiracy-minded — citizens.

It’s an idea that emerged about a century ago from the field of livestock medicine. Epidemiolo­gists now calculate it with a standard equation. But, like many tools that model a complex process with math, it makes some simplifyin­g assumption­s.

For instance, it assumes an unrealisti­c uniformity in the behavior of individual­s and groups, and in the virus’ ability to spread from person to person.

Public health leaders would have been better served by framing vaccinatio­n campaigns around the need for “community immunity,” she said. That would have gotten people to think in more local terms — the ones that really matter when it comes to a person’s risk of infection, she added.

 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A nurse delivers a COVID-19 vaccine at a mobile clinic in a local school. Amid struggles to improve vaccinatio­n rates, the CDC has moved away from herd immunity as a target for ending the pandemic.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES A nurse delivers a COVID-19 vaccine at a mobile clinic in a local school. Amid struggles to improve vaccinatio­n rates, the CDC has moved away from herd immunity as a target for ending the pandemic.

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