Hartford Courant (Sunday)

‘The sky is not falling’ — experts make sense of COVID outbreak

- By Kristie Ackert

BALTIMORE — Aaron Boone could finally laugh and smile a little on Friday afternoon. After a week of talking mostly about COVID-19 and a cluster of breakthrou­gh cases that had broken out among the team’s traveling party, the manager was relieved to say they had not had any new positive cases for two straight days. But after this week of talking about symptoms and testing, Boone was not going to let down his guard again.

“I don’t want to say we’re in the clear ever again,” Boone said with a laugh.

This week, as the country tries to get back to some semblance of normal after living through a year and half of the pandemic, the Yankee have been a high-profile canary in the coal mine. Their cluster has been a warning and a reminder that even as the number of Americans fully vaccinated against the coronaviru­s is growing and some of the protection­s we have adopted are being relaxed, the virus is still there.

We’re making progress, but we’re not in the “clear” yet.

“The most important thing for people to know is that the sky is not falling,” Dr. Tom Clark, head of the Vaccine Evaluation Unit for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vaccine Task Force said on Friday. “This doesn’t mean the vaccines are not working.”

In fact, doctors and scientists see the Yankees case as reassuranc­e the vaccines are working.

No vaccines are 100% effective in a population against contractin­g the disease or even some transmissi­on, doctors and scientists across the country have reminded again and again over the last year.

The Yankees’ cluster shows that, but also shows the vaccines effectiven­ess.

“It might turn a home run into a ball that bounces off the wall, and it might turn a shot into the gap, into a soft ground ball,” Zach Binney, epidemiolo­gist at Oxford College of Emory University said. “That’s kind of what (the vaccine) does, it takes whatever was going to happen to you anyway and in the vast majority of cases makes it less severe.

“That doesn’t mean 100 percent, just like no fielder is going to grab every sharp grounder 100% of the time.”

It is rare, though. As of April 26, there were 95 million Americans vaccinated and just 9,245 cases of COVID-19 among them, compared to the 32,571,814 total cases of the disease in the country. The CDC is now only tracking breakthrou­gh cases that require hospitaliz­ation.

As of May 14, those figures are now 120 million Americans fully vaccinated with 32,681,787 cases in the U.S.

The Yankees eight infected personnel all were fully vaccinated with the one-dose Johnson & Johnson shot. One had mild symptoms which have dissipated and seven showed no signs of illness, reinforcin­g the claims that while the vaccine does not absolutely prevent the disease it does take it from a serious illness to mild, or a home run into a ball off the wall.

“We’re also learning a lot of people who are vaccinated who do get infected actually have no symptoms at all, or a milder illness. Seems like that’s the story with members of the Yankees organizati­on, who probably continue to screen and test regularly so these infections come to light,” Clark said. “Even though people didn’t know they were sick.”

The CDC is not directly investigat­ing the Yankees outbreak. It is being managed through MLB and the New York City Department of Health, a CDC spokespers­on said.

Clark said that while the Yankees’ cluster raised red flags for many because it seemed like a high percentage — eight out of roughly 50 vaccinated people being infected — it didn’t raise alarms with the CDC scientists. Under MLB protocols, the Yankees traveling party is tested several times a week and therefore likely found more asymptomat­ic cases than the general population would.

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