By Liz SzaboJANUARY 15, 2021 This
story also ran on USA Today and GateHouse Media. It can be republished for free.
As an emergency
physician, Dr. Eugenia South was in the first group of people to receive a
covid vaccine. She received her second dose last week — even before
President-elect Joe Biden.
Yet South said she’s in
no rush to throw away her face mask.
“I honestly don’t think
I’ll ever go without a mask at work again,” said South, faculty director of the
Urban Health Lab at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. “I don’t
think I’ll ever feel safe doing that.”
And although covid
vaccines are highly effective, South plans to continue wearing her mask outside
the hospital as well.
Health experts say there are good reasons to follow her example.
“Masks and social
distancing will need to continue into the foreseeable future — until we have
some level of herd immunity,” said Dr. Preeti Malani, chief health officer at
the University of Michigan. “Masks and distancing are here to stay.”
Malani and other health
experts explained five reasons Americans should hold on to their masks:
1. No vaccine is 100%
effective.
Large clinical trials
found that two doses of the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines
prevented 95% of illnesses caused by the coronavirus. While those results are
impressive, 1 in 20 people are left unprotected, said Dr. Tom Frieden, a former
director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Malani notes that
vaccines were tested in controlled clinical trials at top medical centers,
under optimal conditions.
In the real world,
vaccines are usually slightly less effective. Scientists use specific terms to
describe the phenomenon. They refer to the protection offered by vaccines in
clinical trials as “efficacy,” while the actual immunity
seen in a vaccinated population is “effectiveness.”
The effectiveness of
covid vaccines could be affected by the way they’re handled, Malani said. The
genetic material used in mRNA vaccines — made with messenger RNA from the
coronavirus — is so fragile that it has to be carefully stored and transported.
Any variation from the
CDC’s strict guidance could influence how well
vaccines work, Malani said.
2. Vaccines don’t provide
immediate protection.
No vaccine is effective
right away, Malani said. It takes about two weeks for the immune system to make
the antibodies that block viral infections.
Covid vaccines will take
a little longer than other inoculations, such as the flu shot, because both the
Moderna and Pfizer products require two doses. The Pfizer shots are given three
weeks apart; the Moderna shots, four weeks apart.
In other words, full
protection won’t arrive until five or six weeks after the first shot. So, a
person vaccinated on New Year’s Day won’t be fully protected until Valentine’s
Day.
3. Covid vaccines may not
prevent you from spreading the virus.
Vaccines can provide two
levels of protection. The measles vaccine prevents viruses from causing
infection, so vaccinated people don’t spread the infection or develop symptoms.
Most other vaccines —
including flu shots — prevent people from becoming sick but not from becoming
infected or passing the virus to others, said Dr. Paul Offit, who advises
the National Institutes of Health and Food and Drug Administration on covid
vaccines.
While covid vaccines
clearly prevent illness, researchers need more time to figure out whether they
prevent transmission, too, said Phoenix-based epidemiologist Saskia
Popescu, an assistant professor in the biodefense program at George Mason
University’s Schar School of Policy and Government.
“We don’t yet know if the
vaccine protects against infection, or only against illness,” said Frieden, now
CEO of Resolve to Save Lives, a global public health initiative. “In other
words, a vaccinated person might still be able to spread the virus, even if
they don’t feel sick.”
Until researchers can
answer that question, Frieden said, wearing masks is the safest way for
vaccinated people to protect those around them.
4. Masks protect people
with compromised immune systems.
People with cancer are at
particular risk from covid. Studies show they’re more likely than others
to become infected and die from the virus, but may
not be protected by vaccines, said Dr. Gary Lyman, a professor at Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
Cancer patients are
vulnerable in multiple ways. People with lung cancer are less able to fight off
pneumonia, while those undergoing chemotherapy or radiation treatment
have weakened immune systems. Leukemia and lymphoma
attack immune cells directly, which makes it harder for patients to fight off
the virus.
Doctors don’t know much
about how people with cancer will respond to vaccines, because they were
excluded from randomized trials, Lyman said. Only a handful of study
participants were diagnosed with cancer after enrolling. Among those
people, covid vaccines protected only 76%.
Although the vaccines
appear safe, “prior studies with other vaccines raise concerns that
immunosuppressed patients, including cancer patients, may not mount as great an
immune response as healthy patients,” Lyman said. “For now, we should assume
that patients with cancer may not experience the 95% efficacy.”
Some people aren’t able
to be vaccinated.
While most people with
allergies can receive covid vaccines safely, the CDC advises those who have
had severe allergic reactions to vaccine ingredients,
including polyethylene glycol, to avoid vaccination. The agency also warns
people who have had dangerous allergic reactions to a first vaccine dose to
skip the second.
Lyman encourages people
to continue wearing masks to protect those with cancer and others who won’t be
fully protected.
5. Masks protect against
any strain of the coronavirus, in spite of genetic mutations.
Global health leaders are
extremely concerned about new genetic variants of the coronavirus, which
appear to be at least 50% more contagious than the original.
So far, studies suggest vaccines will still work
against these new strains.
One thing is clear:
Public health measures — such as avoiding crowds, physical distancing and masks
— reduce the risk of contracting all strains of the coronavirus, as well as
other respiratory diseases, Frieden said. For example, the number of flu cases worldwide has been
dramatically lower since countries began asking citizens to stay home and wear
masks.
“Masks will remain
effective,” Malani said. “But careful and consistent use will be essential.”
The best hope for ending
the pandemic isn’t to choose between masks, physical distancing and vaccines,
Offit said, but to combine them. “The three approaches work best as a team,” he
said.
Liz Szabo: lszabo@kff.org, @LizSzabo
https://khn.org/news/article/5-reasons-to-wear-a-mask-even-after-youre-vaccinated/
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