Florida

Infected unvaccinated threaten health of all the others

Florida – As the myths about vaccinations against COVID continue to spread, the disease among the unvaccinated spread more and more.
According to FIU professor Dr. Aileen Marty, refuting those who claim the unvaccinated are only putting themselves at risk.
“There are many ways the unvaccinated are directly impacting you as a vaccinated person,” Marty said because while the vaccines are amazingly good, they are not perfect. So the infected unvaccinated can more efficiently spread disease to everyone, including relatively rarely the vaccinated.
“These people are going to be producing a lot of viruses and if there’s a lot of virus in the community — your vaccine is great but it can’t overcome an overwhelming force and that’s what happens when you have all these unvaccinated people around you shedding virus. They shed enormous amounts of virus and that’s what overcomes your vaccine defenses” in a few cases.
At this time, six million Floridians are still not vaccinated. These are those who become infected and spew the virus more efficiently among themselves and, to a much lesser degree, to the 11 million who are fully vaccinated. If the vaccine is 90 percent effective, 10 percent of the vaccinated are put at risk when exposed to the virus-shedders.
According to Marty, there are indirect impacts, such as on “our entire healthcare system. They’re using resources that cannot be used if you have a heart attack or you get in a car accident.”
Some promoters of vaccine hesitancy twist the existence of the rare so-called breakthrough infections into a reason not to get a vaccine.
“It’s absolutely not a good point,” Marty said. “While of course, a vaccine is not a magical shield that keeps the virus from getting into your body, it does help prevent the viral particles from entering your cells” which makes the vaccinated less susceptible to severe illness.
According to CDC last week’s report, the unvaccinated are 10 times more likely to be hospitalized and 11 times more likely to die.
Some believe that herd immunity – whether conferred by vaccine or prior infection – will end the pandemic.
According to Marty, the quickest and safest way to herd immunity is through vaccination. “It reflects the use of vaccination, not the spread of a wild virus.” She said it’s not yet clear how much the public can rely on the natural immunity of those who already had COVID and did not die. But she knows how it works with other pathogens.
“How many times can you get strep?” she asked. “Many, many, many times. You never form good immunity against that and natural immunity to coronaviruses in general — all the coronaviruses — doesn’t tend to last that long.”
 

Lowell Bowen

From the time he was 8 years old Lowell knew he wanted to be on TV. Well, as people say one thing leads to another, that's how Lowell started his career in the news industry. Lowell has been part of The South Florida Daily since the very beginning.

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