Springfield News-Sun

Catching COVID provides ‘durable’ protection from virus, study finds

- By Julia Marnin

A past COVID-19 infec- tion offers “durable,” temporary protection against getting severely sick with the coronaviru­s — no matter the variant, a new study has found.

Though natural immunity against COVID-19 offers protection­s, the findings don’t discourage vaccina- tion, which is still the top method of preventing serious illness, experts involved in the research say.

University of Washington researcher­s are calling their study published Feb. 16 in the peer-reviewed journal The Lancet the most comprehens­ive to date when it comes to showing evidence of natural immunity protection against COVID-19.

The protection offered by natural immunity against COVID-19 hospitaliz­ation and death lasts for nearly a year, the study found. Spe- cifically, a person’s risk of needing hospital treatment for the virus or dying from it was 88% lower for at least 10 months.

Catching COVID-19 was also shown to guard against reinfectio­ns, symptoms while a person is infected and severe illness when it came to the “ancestral” virus variants — meaning the alpha, delta and orig- inal omicron strains, the study found.

The work “suggests that the level and duration of protection against rein- fection, symptomati­c disease and severe illness is at least on a par with that provided by two doses of the MRNA vaccines (Moderna, Pfizer-biontech) for ancestral, Alpha, Delta and Omicron BA.1 variants,” a news release on the study said.

The findings are based on a meta-analysis of 65 studies from 19 countries, including the U.S., the U.K., Canada, India and Norway, to assess the effectiven­ess of a prior COVID-19 infection in protecting a person. It included studies examining COVID-19 reinfectio­ns of people who weren’t vaccinated.

The research didn’t examine data on the newer omicron XBB variant or its sublineage­s. The omicron XBB.1.5 variant is the most dominant in the U.S., Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows.

“Vaccinatio­n is the safest way to acquire immunity, whereas acquiring natural immunity must be weighed against the risks of severe illness and death associated with the initial infection,” Dr. Stephen Lim, lead study author and a professor at the University of Washington’s Department of Health Metrics Sciences, said in a statement.

If a person was previously infected with a COVID-19 variant other than omicron, the protection against a subsequent omicron infection was significan­tly lower, the research noted.

However, if a person was previously infected with omicron, there was a higher chance of being protected against a future omicron infection — but not for the BA.4 and BA.5 subvariant­s, researcher­s wrote.

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