Houston Chronicle

‘Herd immunity’ likely out of reach in U.S.

Amid drop in vaccinatio­n rates, health experts reset game plan for long-term disease control

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

Early in the pandemic, when vaccines for the coronaviru­s were still just a glimmer on the horizon, the term “herd immunity” came to signify the endgame: the point when enough Americans would be protected from the virus so we could be rid of the pathogen and reclaim our lives.

Now, more than half of adults in the United States have been inoculated with at least one dose of a vaccine. But daily vaccinatio­n rates are slipping, and there is widespread consensus among scientists and public health experts that the herd immunity threshold is not attainable — at least not in the foreseeabl­e future, and perhaps not ever.

Instead, they are coming to the conclusion that rather than making a long-promised exit, the virus will most likely become a manageable threat that will continue to circulate in the U.S. for years to come, still causing hospitaliz­ations and deaths but in much smaller numbers.

How much smaller is uncertain and depends in part on how much of the nation, and the world, becomes vaccinated and how the virus evolves. It is already clear, however, that the virus is changing too quickly, new variants are spreading too easily and vaccinatio­n is proceeding too slowly for herd immunity to be within reach anytime soon.

Continued immunizati­ons, especially for people at highest risk because of age, exposure or health status, will be crucial to limiting the severity of outbreaks, if not their frequency, experts believe.

“The virus is unlikely to go away,” said Rustom Antia, an evolutiona­ry biologist at Emory University in Atlanta. “But we want to do all we can to check that it’s likely to become a mild infection.”

The shift in outlook presents a new challenge for public health authoritie­s. The drive for herd immunity — by the summer, some experts once thought possible — captured the imaginatio­n of large segments of the public. To say the goal will not be attained adds another “why bother” to the list of reasons that vaccine skeptics use to avoid being inoculated.

Yet vaccinatio­ns remain the key to transformi­ng the virus in

to a controllab­le threat, experts said.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Biden administra­tion’s top adviser on COVID-19, acknowledg­ed the shift in experts’ thinking.

“People were getting confused and thinking you’re never going to get the infections down until you reach this mystical level of herd immunity, whatever that number is,” he said.

“That’s why we stopped using herd immunity in the classic sense,” he added. “I’m saying: Forget that for a second. You vaccinate enough people, the infections are going to go down.”

A difficult threshold

Once the coronaviru­s began to spread across the globe in early 2020, it became increasing­ly clear that the only way out of the pandemic would be for so many people to gain immunity — whether through natural infection or vaccinatio­n — that the virus would run out of people to infect. The concept of reaching herd immunity became the implicit goal in many countries, including the U.S.

Early on, the target herd immunity threshold was estimated to be about 60 percent to 70 percent of the population. Most experts, including Fauci, expected that the U.S. would be able to reach it once vaccines were available.

But as vaccines were developed and distributi­on ramped up through the winter and into the spring, estimates of the threshold began to rise. That is because the initial calculatio­ns were based on the contagious­ness of the original version of the virus. The predominan­t variant now circulatin­g in the U.S., called B.1.1.7 and first identified in Britain, is about 60 percent more transmissi­ble.

As a result, experts now calculate the herd immunity threshold to be at least 80 percent. If even more contagious variants develop, or if scientists find that immunized people can still transmit the virus, the calculatio­n will have to be revised upward again.

Polls show that about 30 percent of the U.S. population is still reluctant to be vaccinated. That number is expected to improve but probably not enough. “It is theoretica­lly possible that we could get to about 90 percent vaccinatio­n coverage, but not super likely, I would say,” said Marc Lipsitch, a public health researcher at the Harvard T.H.

Chan School of Public Health.

Although resistance to the vaccines is a main reason the U.S. is unlikely to reach herd immunity, it is not the only one.

Herd immunity is often described as a national target. But that is a hazy concept in a country this large.

“Disease transmissi­on is local,” Lipsitch said.

“If the coverage is 95 percent in the United States as a whole, but 70 percent in some small town, the virus doesn’t care,” he said. “It will make its way around the small town.”

Given the degree of movement among regions, a small virus wave in a region with a low vaccinatio­n level can easily spill over into an area where a majority of the population is protected.

At the same time, the connectivi­ty between countries, particular­ly as travel restrictio­ns ease, emphasizes the urgency of protecting not just Americans but everyone in the world, said Natalie

Dean, a biostatist­ician at the University of Florida in Gainesvill­e. Any variants that arise in the world will eventually reach the U.S., she said.

Many parts of the world lag far behind the U.S. on vaccinatio­ns. Less than 2 percent of the people in India have been fully vaccinated, for example, and less than 1 percent in South Africa, data compiled by the New York Times shows.

“We will not achieve herd immunity as a country or a state or even as a city until we have enough immunity in the population as a whole,” said Lauren Ancel Meyers, the director of the COVID-19 Modeling Consortium at the University of Texas at Austin.

What the future may hold

If the herd immunity threshold is not attainable, what matters most is the rate of hospitaliz­ations and deaths after pandemic restrictio­ns are relaxed, experts believe.

By focusing on vaccinatin­g the most vulnerable, the U.S. has already brought those numbers down sharply. If the vaccinatio­n levels of that group continue to rise, the expectatio­n is that over time the coronaviru­s may become seasonal, like the flu, and affect mostly the young and healthy.

“What we want to do at the very least is get to a point where we have just really sporadic little flare-ups,” said Carl Bergstrom, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle. “That would be a very sensible target in this country where we have an excellent vaccine and the ability to deliver it.”

Over the long term — a generation or two — the goal is to transition the coronaviru­s to become more like its cousins that cause common colds. That would mean the first infection is early in childhood, and subsequent infections are mild because of partial protection, even if immunity wanes.

Some unknown proportion of people with mild cases may go on to experience debilitati­ng symptoms for weeks or months — a syndrome called “long COVID” — but they are unlikely to overwhelm the health care system.

“The vast majority of the mortality and of the stress on the health care system comes from people with a few particular conditions, and especially people who are over 60,” Lipsitch said. “If we can protect those people against severe illness and death, then we will have turned COVID from a society disrupter to a regular infectious disease.”

“Forget (herd immunity) for a second. You vaccinate enough people, the infections are going to go down.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci

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