Breakthrough Infections? Here’s How to Navigate This Phase of the Pandemic.

If you’re vaccinated, you should think about a number of variables, including 
your overall health, where you live and the risks you take.

By Tara Parker-Pope  Sept. 3, 2021 
https://www.nytimes.com/article/breakthrough-infections-covid-19-coronavirus.html


Many people are seeking definitive answers about what they can and can’t do 
after being vaccinated against Covid-19. Is it OK to travel? Should I go to a 
wedding? Does the Delta variant make spending time with my vaccinated 
grandmother more risky?

But there’s no one-size-fits-all answer to those questions because risk changes 
from one individual to the next, depending on a person’s overall health, where 
they live and those they spend time with.

The bottom line is that vaccines are highly protective against serious illness, 
and, with some precautions, will allow people to return to more normal lives, 
experts say. A recent study in Los Angeles County showed that while 
breakthrough infections can happen, the unvaccinated are 29 times as likely to 
end up hospitalized from Covid-19 as a vaccinated person.

Experts say anxiety about breakthrough infections remains pervasive, fueled in 
part by frightening headlines and unrealistic expectations about the role of 
vaccines.

“There’s been a lot of miscommunication about what the risks really are to 
vaccinated people, and how vaccinated people should be thinking about their 
lives,” said Dr. Ashish K. Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public 
Health. “There are people who think we are back to square one .. but we are in 
a much, much better place.”

While the Delta variant is causing a surge in infections in various hot spots 
around the country, including Florida and Louisiana, there will eventually be 
an end to the pandemic. Getting there will require ongoing precautions in the 
coming months, but vaccinated people will have more freedom to enjoy life than 
they did during the early lockdowns.

Here are answers to some common questions about the road ahead.

What’s my risk of getting Covid if I’m vaccinated?

To understand why there is no simple answer to this question, think about 
another common risk: driving in a snowstorm. While we know that tens of 
thousands of people are injured or killed each year on icy roads, your 
individual risk depends on local conditions, the speed at which you travel, 
whether you’re wearing a seatbelt, the safety features on your car and whether 
you encounter a reckless driver on the road.

Your individual risk for Covid after vaccination also depends on local 
conditions, your overall health, the precautions you take and how often you are 
exposed to unvaccinated people who could be infected.

“People want to be told what to do — is it safe if I do this?” said Dr. Sharon 
Balter, director of the division of communicable disease control and prevention 
at the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. “What we can say is, 
‘These are the things that are more risky, and these are the things that are 
less risky.’”

Dr. Balter’s team has recently collected surveillance data that give us a 
clearer picture of the difference in risk to the vaccinated and unvaccinated as 
the Delta variant surged from May 1 through July 25. They studied infections in 
10,895 fully vaccinated people and 30,801 unvaccinated people. The data showed 
that:

* The rate of infection in unvaccinated people is five times the rate of 
infection in vaccinated people. By the end of the study period, the 
age-adjusted incidence of Covid-19 among unvaccinated persons was 315.1 per 
100,000 people over a seven-day period compared to 63.8 per 100,000 incidence 
rate among fully vaccinated people. (Age adjustment is a statistical method 
used so the data are representative of the general population.)

* The rate of hospitalization among the vaccinated was 1 per 100,000 people. 
The age-adjusted hospitalization rate in unvaccinated persons was 29.4 per 
100,000.

* Older vaccinated people were most vulnerable to serious illness after a 
breakthrough infection. The median age of vaccinated people who were 
hospitalized for Covid was 64 years. Among unvaccinated people who were 
hospitalized, the median age was 49.

* The Delta variant appears to have increased the risk of breakthrough 
infections to vaccinated people. At the start of the study, before Delta was 
dominant, unvaccinated people became infected 10 times as often as vaccinated 
people did. By the end of study period, when Delta accounted for almost 90 
percent of infections, unvaccinated people were five times as likely to get 
infected as vaccinated people.

What’s the chance of a vaccinated person spreading Covid-19?

While unvaccinated people are by far at highest risk for catching and spreading 
Covid-19, it’s also possible for a vaccinated person to become infected and 
transmit the illness to others. A recent outbreak in Provincetown, Mass., where 
thousands of people gathered in bars and restaurants, showed that vaccinated 
people can sometimes spread the virus.

Even so, many experts believe the risk of getting infected from a vaccinated 
person is still relatively low. Dr. Jha noted that after an outbreak among 
vaccinated and unvaccinated workers at the Singapore airport, tracking studies 
suggested that most of the spread by vaccinated people happened when they had 
symptoms.

“When we’ve seen outbreaks, like those among the Yankees earlier in the year 
and other cases, almost always people are symptomatic when they’re spreading,” 
Dr. Jha said. “The asymptomatic, pre-symptomatic spread could happen, but we 
haven’t seen it among vaccinated people with any frequency.”

Another study from Singapore looked at vaccinated and unvaccinated people 
infected with the Delta variant. The researchers found that while viral loads 
in vaccinated and unvaccinated workers are similar at the onset of illness, the 
amount of virus declines more rapidly in the vaccinated after the first week, 
suggesting vaccinated people are infectious for a shorter period of time.

Is it still safe to gather unmasked with vaccinated people?

In many cases it will be safe, but the answer depends on a number of variables. 
The risk is lower with a few close family members and friends than a large 
group of people you don’t know. Outdoor gatherings are safer than indoor 
gatherings. What’s the community transmission rate? What’s the ventilation in 
the room? Do you have underlying health issues that would make you vulnerable 
to complications from Covid-19? Do any of the vaccinated people have a fever, 
sniffles or a cough?

“The big question is can five people sit around a table unmasked if we know 
they’re all vaccinated,” Dr. Jha said. “I think the answer is yes. The chances 
of anybody spreading the virus in that context is exceedingly low. And if 
someone does spread the virus, the other people are not going to get super sick 
from it. I certainly think most of us should not fear breakthrough infections 
to the point where we won’t tolerate doing things we really value in life.”

For larger gatherings or even small gatherings with a highly vulnerable person, 
rapid antigen testing using home testing kits can lower risk. Asking people to 
use a test a few days before the event, and then the day of the event, adds 
another layer of protection. Opening windows and doors or adding a HEPA air 
cleaner can also help.

How can unvaccinated children go to school safely?

Children under 12 probably will not be eligible for vaccination until the end 
of the year. As a result, the best way to protect them is to make sure all the 
adults and older kids around them are vaccinated. A recent report from the 
C.D.C. found that an unvaccinated elementary schoolteacher who didn’t wear a 
mask spread the virus to half of the students in a classroom.

Studies show that schools have not been a major cause of Covid-spreading 
events, particularly when a number of prevention measures are in place. A 
combination of precautions — masking indoors, keeping students at least three 
feet apart in classrooms, keeping students in separate cohorts or “pods,” 
encouraging hand washing and regular testing, and quarantining — have been 
effective. While many of those studies occurred before the Delta variant became 
dominant, they also happened when most teachers, staff and parents were 
unvaccinated, so public health experts are hopeful that the same precautions 
will work well this fall.

Dr. Balter noted that masking in schools, regular testing and improving 
ventilation will keep children safer, and that parents should be reassured by 
the data.

“The level of illness in children is much less than adults,” she said. “You do 
weigh all these things, but there are also a lot of consequences to not sending 
children to school.”

Can a vaccinated person visit with an elderly vaccinated person indoors without 
a mask?

In many cases it will be relatively safe for vaccinated people to spend time, 
unmasked, with an older relative. But the risk depends on local conditions and 
the precautions the visitor has taken in the days leading up to the visit. In 
areas where community vaccination rates are low and overall infection rates are 
high, meeting outdoors or wearing a mask may be advised.

If you’re vaccinated but have been going to restaurants, large gatherings or 
spending time with unvaccinated people, it’s a good idea to practice more 
social distancing in the days leading up to your visit with an older or 
vulnerable person. Home testing a few days before the visit and the day of the 
visit will add another layer of protection.

Gregg Gonsalves, an assistant professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of 
Public Health, said he recently visited his 87-year-old mother and did not wear 
a mask. But that is because both of them are vaccinated and he still works 
mostly from home, lives in a highly vaccinated area and has low risk for 
exposure. He is also investing in home testing kits for reassurance that he is 
not infectious.

“If I just came back from a big crowded gathering, and I had to go see my mom, 
I would put on a mask,” he said.

Is it safe to work in an office?

The answer depends on the precautions your workplace has taken. Does the 
company require proof of vaccination to come into the office? Are unvaccinated 
people tested regularly? What percentage of people in the office are 
unvaccinated? What steps did your company take to improve indoor air quality? 
(Upgrading the filters in ventilation systems and adding stand-alone HEPA air 
cleaners are two simple steps that can reduce viral particles in the air.)

Offices that mandate vaccination will be safer, but vaccination rates need to 
exceed 90 percent. Even an 85-percent vaccination rate is not enough, Dr. Jha 
said. “It’s not going to work because one of those 15-percent unvaccinated is 
going to cause an outbreak for every single person in that room,” he said. “You 
do not want a bunch of unvaccinated people running around your offices.”

Should I get a booster shot, and will it help protect me against Delta?

The people who have the most to gain from booster shots are older people, 
transplant patients, people with compromised immune systems or those with 
underlying conditions that put them at high risk for complications from Covid. 
People who received the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine may also be good 
candidates for a second dose.

But many experts say healthy people with normal immune systems who received a 
two-dose mRNA vaccine from Pfizer or Moderna won’t get much benefit right now 
from a third shot because their vaccine antibodies still offer strong 
protection against severe illness. That said, the Biden administration appears 
to be moving ahead with offering booster shots to the general public starting 
as soon as the week of Sept. 20.



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