The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Shedding after vaccine? Answer is no

- — D.I. — P.S. Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

In a recent column, you wrote that there is no risk to family from shedding after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine. You failed to mention that according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the grandparen­ts could catch COVID and spread it even after being fully vaccinated. Also, according to the CDC, they might be contagious and have a viral load, even before they start showing any symptoms. Isn’t the only way to ensure they are not contagious to be tested?

The topic of that column was shedding after a vaccine, and it is true there is no risk of shedding COVID-19 from the vaccinatio­n. However, you are correct that it is possible for a vaccinated person to have active, asymptomat­ic infection.

New data from the age of the delta variant shows that asymptomat­ic, vaccinated people may indeed by infectious. For this reason, wearing a mask remains important, especially around people at high risk for complicati­ons for COVID-19. That includes vaccinated individual­s.

It’s very important to note that the risk of asymptomat­ic infection spreading from a vaccinated person is much lower than from an unvaccinat­ed person, simply because someone who is vaccinated is a lot less likely to get COVID-19.

I’m an 83-year-old woman. Two years ago, I was diagnosed with diverticul­itis. It comes and goes. My doctor recommende­d I see a surgeon, who recommende­d a sigmoidosc­opy. I don’t see what the benefit is. I had two CT scans that showed diverticul­itis. The surgeon said he would not do surgery on me.

Do you think I should have the sigmoidosc­opy? Is there any risk to this procedure? The doctor said I would be sedated, and I am very reluctant to have it done.

All procedures have risks. A sigmoidosc­opy generally has fewer risks than a full colonoscop­y, but there is still a risk of damage to the colon, and even moderate sedation, by itself, has risks. The likelihood of benefit must be weighed against the risk of harms.

In your case, I think I can guess why the surgeon wants you to get the sigmoidosc­opy. The diagnosis really isn’t in doubt — the CT scans you had are definitive. My best guess is that the surgeon wants to be sure there isn’t something else there, especially cancer.

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