The Oklahoman

Experts: Vaccinatio­n worth it even if you still have to wear a mask

- By Karen Weintraub

Get a COVID -19 vaccine and you' ll be counseled to keep wearing a mask and keep staying away from other people. So, what's t he point?

There's an immediate benefit to the individual who gets a vaccine, said Andy Slav itt, White House senior advisor on the COVID-19 response. “People are interested in taking the vaccine,” he said at a Monday news conference, because “they don't want to be sick and they don't want to die.”

Getting two shots of either the Modern a or Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine reduces an individual's risk of developing symptomati­c COVID- 1 9 by about 95%, according to large research trials.

But life won't get back to something like normal for the broader society until national infection rates come down further, according to Dr. Anthony F au ci, the nation' s top infectious disease expert, and Dr. Rochelle Walensky, t he head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Even though infection and hospitaliz­ation rates have fallen precipitou­sly since their peak around Jan .10, rates are still too high, W al en sky said, remaining above the levels of the previous peak last summer. Roughly 66,000 people are getting infected with COVID-19 every day in the United States.

“There are things, even if you're vaccinated, that you' re not going to be able to do in society, for example, indoor dining, theaters, (going) places where people congregate ,” Fauci said.

It' s alsop os sib le, though research increasing­ly suggests it's unlikely, that vaccinated people could still transmit the virus, even if they don't fall ill themselves. “For that reason, we want to make sure that people continue to wear masks despite the fact that they're vaccinated,” Fauci said.

The CDC is still working out exactly what is safe and what isn' t for those who are vaccinated.

W al en sky said the agency has concluded that“if you' ve been exposed and you've been fully vaccinated–two doses – there is no longer the need to qua ranti ne after you've been exposed.”

Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children' s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, said his behavior has changed since he got his two shots.

“As a vaccinated person, I definitely feel different ,” Off it said, “even though I could be one of those 1 in 20 who isn't protected.”

Off it agrees that it' s still not safe for people who've been vaccinated togo out in crowds, because infection rates remain so high.

It's not clear, he said, what the threshold should be that allows people to let their guards–and masks – down. But we will get there relatively soon, he said.

“I think the numbers are going to get better and better,” Offit said.

Most likely, Offit said, virus levels will fall now through the summer and then rise again as temperatur­es fall.

 ?? MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER] ?? Masks are stacked on a table Saturday at Alabama State University in Montgomery, Ala. [MICKEY WELSH/
MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER] Masks are stacked on a table Saturday at Alabama State University in Montgomery, Ala. [MICKEY WELSH/

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