Houston Chronicle Sunday

Are unvaccinat­ed still a danger to others?

- Melissa Healy

LOS ANGELES — For almost two years, COVID-19 vaccine holdouts have been the objects of earnest pleading and financial inducement­s, of social-media shaming and truth campaigns. They’ve missed weddings, birthday celebratio­ns and recitals, and even forfeited highstakes athletic competitio­ns. Until last month, they were barred from entering the United States and more than 100 other countries.

Now the unvaccinat­ed are suddenly back in the mix. They’re dining in restaurant­s, rocking out at music festivals and filling the stands at sporting venues. They mingle freely in places where they used to be shunned for fear they’d seed supersprea­der events.

It’s as if they’re no longer hazardous to the rest of us. Or are they?

“Clearly, the unvaccinat­ed are a threat to themselves,” said Dr. Jeffrey Shaman, an infectious disease specialist at Columbia University. As recently as August, their risk of dying of COVID-19 was six times higher than for people who were fully vaccinated and eight times higher than for people who were vaccinated and boosted, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But, Shaman acknowledg­ed, “the danger to the rest of us is a more debatable issue.”

When public officials imposed vaccine mandates, the unvaccinat­ed certainly appeared to pose demonstrab­le dangers to their communitie­s.

State and local leaders sought not only to suppress spread of the virus, but also to prevent their health care systems from being overwhelme­d, degrading care for all. The unvaccinat­ed made those goals harder to achieve since they were more likely to become infected and, when they did, to require hospitaliz­ation.

U.S. officials had long hoped to vaccinate the American public into a state of “herd immunity,” in which so few people would be vulnerable to the virus that the outbreak would simply sputter out. That objective assumed a uniformly high uptake of vaccine across the nation. It also assumed a vaccine that protected against reinfectio­n, and did so durably.

But none of that came to pass. About 30 percent of Americans have yet to complete their initial series of COVID-19 shots, including the 20 percent who haven’t rolled up their sleeves even once. Meanwhile, the virus continues to evolve in ways that erode vaccines’ protection, making “breakthrou­gh infections” increasing­ly common.

The longer the pandemic drags on, the more complicate­d things get.

For one thing, whether those who remain unvaccinat­ed are still driving coronaviru­s spread hinges partly on the status of the U.S. population’s immunity. Almost three years into the pandemic, that is a hard map to draw — both because the public’s immunity comes from different sources, and because it waxes and wanes.

More than 200 million adults and nearly 25 million children ages 5 and up have completed a primary series of COVID-19 vaccine. However, against the omicron variant, just being “fully vaccinated” confers little more than a whiff of protection against infection and illness.

For the 49 percent of “fully vaccinated” Americans who’ve had at least one booster dose, infection remains a possibilit­y, but the prospects of becoming seriously ill or dying of COVID-19 are sharply reduced.

And then there’s the “natural immunity” gained from a coronaviru­s infection. By February 2022, after the first wave of omicron infections swept across the U.S., 58 percent of Americans were believed to have been infected

at some point in the pandemic, leaving them with some modest level of protection. The ranks of the previously infected have surely increased since then thanks to the second omicron surge during the late spring and summer.

An unknown number of Americans have “hybrid immunity” from both an infection and vaccine. Researcher­s believe that catching the coronaviru­s after vaccinatio­n (though not so much the other way around) may provide enhanced protection against severe illness and death. But whether that is the case — and how much — can vary based on how long ago an infection took place and the particular variant that caused it.

In other words, Americans range in vulnerabil­ity from the unvaccinat­ed and never infected to the vaccinated, previously infected and fully boosted, with infinite gradations of protection in between.

In conditions like these, the role the unvaccinat­ed could play in seeding outbreaks will vary.

“It’s kind of a patchwork,” said Harvard University epidemiolo­gist Stephen Kissler. “It’s changing over time, and it’s changing over space. So it’s hard to say where any given community is at any given time.”

The steady waning of immunity raises a discouragi­ng prospect: that over time, people who are still called “fully vaccinated” will become indistingu­ishable from the unvaccinat­ed unless they’ve received a booster. Until more Americans embrace booster shots, the “undervacci­nated” will steadily swell the ranks of the vulnerable.

Wherever they are, they’ll help keep the pandemic going.

The country’s mainstay vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna do not construct a force field around recipients that shields them from ever becoming infected with the coronaviru­s. Nor do they prevent a person with a breakthrou­gh infection from spreading the virus to others.

However, the vaccines appear to reduce the amount of virus a sick person sheds by coughing, sneezing or simply talking. That means unvaccinat­ed people are not only more likely to be infected, but also somewhat more likely to spread it to others.

And as the unvaccinat­ed are joined by ever-larger numbers of people who are undervacci­nated, surges become a more plausible prospect.

People routinely confuse their communitie­s’ state of immunity with their own vulnerabil­ity, said Dr. Peter Hotez, co-director of the Center for Vaccine Developmen­t at Texas Children’s Hospital and dean of Baylor College of Medicine’s National School of Tropical Medicine. When fewer of their neighbors are getting sick and dying, and high vaccinatio­n rates have suppressed COVID-19, even the unvaccinat­ed feel invulnerab­le.

“That could be a lethal mistake,” he warned.

 ?? Tribune News Service file photo ?? Anti-vaccinatio­n activists participat­e in a rally in January after a Defeat The Mandates DC march at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC.
Tribune News Service file photo Anti-vaccinatio­n activists participat­e in a rally in January after a Defeat The Mandates DC march at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC.

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