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Is the herd immunity dream dead?


Harry Om

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"Is it time to call it? Is the dream of herd immunity to COVID-19, at least in the short term, dead?

That’s the assessment of the evidence by several leading scientists – although not everyone agrees.

Delta is so contagious, they argue, it pushes the herd immunity threshold to an almost unreachable point."

 

https://www.theage.com.au/national/is-the-herd-immunity-dream-dead-20210809-p58h50.html

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Herd immunity may not be achievable.  In Michigan 50% of the deer are infected with Covid.  Probably other wild mammal species are also.  We're not going to vaccinate the deer.  So, humans will now be in constant contact with an animal reservoir.  So, goodbye herd immunity.

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1 hour ago, johng said:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/08/10/delta-variant-has-wrecked-hopes-herd-immunity-warn-scientists/

 

"Prof Hunter, who advises the World Health Organisation on Covid, also said it was time to change the way the data was collected and recorded as the virus became endemic.

"We need to start moving away from just reporting infections, or just reporting positive cases admitted to hospital, to actually start reporting the number of people who are ill because of Covid," he added. "Otherwise we are going to be frightening ourselves with very high numbers that actually don't translate into disease burden."

 

New cases represent not the disease burden, but the risk burden.

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23 hours ago, it is what it is said:

 

what will likely happen is covid will become endemic and we'll learnt to live with it as we do with so many viruses and other medical conditions

Variants will come and go and God only knows when a new strain will be coming our way. If the strain is not natural based [produced in a lab] we could be in for a world of hurt.

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On 8/11/2021 at 7:12 AM, thaibeachlovers said:

Even the Black Death reached herd immunity. Had it not I doubt any of us would be around now.

There was never herd immunity to the black death. It was eliminated by quarantine (the proper stuff - 40 days) and severe lockdowns. Well, not actually eliminated as it kept returning regularly up to the late 16th century although the last outbreak was around Los Angeles in 1925.

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5 minutes ago, mrfill said:

There was never herd immunity to the black death. It was eliminated by quarantine (the proper stuff - 40 days) and severe lockdowns. Well, not actually eliminated as it kept returning regularly up to the late 16th century although the last outbreak was around Los Angeles in 1925.

The plague was never eliminated. Over a thousand people still contract it every year. There was a major outbreak in Madagascar in 2017, and it was streptomycin resistant. There are usually several cases in the USA every year (7 is the average). There was one in California last year. But we have got much better at treating it. As far as I know, the last deaths in the USA were 2015. But with antibiotic resistant strains on the rise, there is a new global push for a vaccine.

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50 minutes ago, japanese said:

Herd immunity can only happen with natural immunity and/or with a vaccine that provides for sterilizing immunity.

 

The covid vaccines are 'leaky' and do not provide sterilizing immunity.

 

Ergo mass vaccination has led to a situation whereby herd immunity is not possible. 

 

Further, we will likely see a never ending cycle of mutations that will infect vaccinated, and unvaccinated that do not already have natural immunity. There is also a risk that more deadly strains will emerge from vaccinated people.  Usually deadly strains finish off the host and in doing so finish themselves off.  'Leaky' vaccines may allow the host to survive, so the mutated strain may be passed on to another host.

 

At least the unvaccinated will likely only catch covid once.

 

We may see a future of people being weened off the vaccines, and a lot of people angry with their government/workplace having been pushed to get a vaccine without full information.  And maybe 'unvaccinated passports' issued to those with natural immunity whilst vaccinated are asked to shelter at home...

Evidence is emerging that people infected with the original strain can be infected by Delta, especially if they had a mild case the first time. So discount herd immunity through infection.

 

As for herd immunity through vaccination, it will not be achieved until there is a big increase in mRNA production capacity and an efficient distribution system to get ahead of the variants. This production should be handled by countries with advanced capability in mRNA technology, since production by amateurs would undermine confidence in the safety and efficacity of mRNA vaccine.

 

It would help a lot if the world (via WHO?) could develop a unified vaccine passport that would be connected to a database that monitors the many vaccines that are emerging, so that people can know whether they are really protected at any point in time.

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10 hours ago, placeholder said:

Actually, measles is more contagious. But not prone to mutate in a way that affects immunity. 

And, in except for very ,very rare, and those infected as mature adults it is not fatal nor does it have severe comorbidity features as Covid strains do. So while it like measles is also a virus I fail to see the efficacy of making such a comparison.

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4 minutes ago, Polar Bear said:

The plague was never eliminated. Over a thousand people still contract it every year. There was a major outbreak in Madagascar in 2017, and it was streptomycin resistant. There are usually several cases in the USA every year (7 is the average). There was one in California last year. But we have got much better at treating it. As far as I know, the last deaths in the USA were 2015. But with antibiotic resistant strains on the rise, there is a new global push for a vaccine.

There is a plague vaccine, but it is old tech. The new vaccine you evoke:

https://www.sciencealert.com/a-new-vaccine-for-plague-is-about-to-undergo-human-trials

That said, deaths from plague are nothing compared to Covid. It's a question of outbreak management.

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The Delta strain is similarly infectious and dangerous as the common cold. No one would think of locking down cities and economies to try and slow the spread of colds or yearly flus.

 

We have never reached herd immunity for the common cold and flu and never will. This is because here are new strains every year. Covid will be the same, but the strains will become less dangerous as the virus's characteristics are increasingly recognised by our immune systems 

 

The Spanish Flu (1918 - 1920) was more infectious and dangerous than Covid, but disappeared  after 2 years. This was because everyone had caught it and gotten better or died. The virus morphed into a strain that was not particularly dangerous and its genetics is still with us. Strangely, after 1920 there were a few remote places that has never been exposed to the virus and had no immunity. These places remained at severe risk and had to be quarantined.

 

We just have to live with Covid and get on with life.  Once 80% of the population is vaccinated lockdowns will be a waste of time. The most vulnerable will need to get a yearly booster. 

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The herd immunity was not only a "dream" but basically... a scam.

 

Even WHO said 7 months ago : "The proportion of the population that must be vaccinated against COVID-19 to begin inducing herd immunity is not known." ????

 

Link : https://www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/herd-immunity-lockdowns-and-covid-19

 

A scam designed to force the "vaccines" onto the population with the idea : "get it, it's the condition to go back to normal".

 

Very early on, real scientists said : "coronaviruses mutate a lot, and recombine a lot, we will have vaccine evasion".

 

But no one listened to them.

 

Now, back to square one.

 

Vaccine or no vaccine, the virus will find its ways.

 

The real question is : are we ready to stop the drama, and the psychosis about "cases" (the famous "positive but asymptomatics cases") ?

 

Are we ready to acknowledge that to die at 80 years old is perfectly normal (from any cause) ?

 

Are we ready to acknowledge that obesity for instance is a real morbidity, and a big killer in the world, and that we should help those people, with prevention rather than to "lockdown" and close everything ?

 

This morning i went to Makro.

Impossible to buy a frying pan (Covid rules you understand, dark red province, terrible)... but the alley with...weighing scales was open. I could buy one.

 

This is the mindset we need to let go.

 

So are we ready or not ?

 

Or do we wish to continue destroying the society, and the people around the world ?

Edited by cclub75
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6 minutes ago, Etaoin Shrdlu said:

It looks like Covid will be with us for a long time. If we are fortunate, in the near to medium term a combination of vaccination and/or infection will confer sufficient resistance so that illness becomes much less severe and hospitalizations and deaths decline significantly. If we are really lucky, science will deliver a vaccine that confers sterilizing immunity, preferably one that can be administered orally, or at least does not require expensive and complicated storage. Think polio vaccine. This would be the endgame for this virus.

 

Until we reach such level, all we have is preventative measures such as masking, hand washing and restrictions on certain activities and gatherings. To me, it does not stand to reason that we should abandon such measures and open up at this time. That will be appropriate a bit later on, after more widespread resistance to severe illness is attained. We just aren't there yet. 

 

It is extremely difficult to determine the optimal level of restrictions so as to save lives and reduce the strain on healthcare services while still keeping the economy running at an acceptable level. This calls for a nuanced approach and one that can change quickly depending upon circumstances. Simply opening everything or locking down everything in an on/off manner won't work other than in extreme situations where a real lockdown may be necessary to curb a severe outbreak. One hopes this would only need to be done in geographically-limited areas and for a very short time.

 

There have been many mis-steps on the part of both experts and politicians since the pandemic emerged, not to mention deliberate mis-information spread by other actors for whatever reason. We were told that there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission by the WHO as late as mid-January 2020. We were told that masks won't help the general public, until were were told that they did. Some leaders said that wearing masks was a sign of weakness or a loss of personal freedom. Politicians of many stripes have used the pandemic to push their own agendas, often at the expense of the public, Charlatans and snake-oil salesmen have made their attempts to cash in. 

 

I suspect our experts and other leaders will get things wrong again in the future, but I'm hopeful that reason and science will prevail and we'll get past this low point. To do so, we somehow have to be able to distinguish signal from noise and focus on the strategies that will get us to higher ground. I think we should listen to institutions and experts that have proven records in their respective fields and also look for general consensus among them, even if they got things a bit wrong at the outset.

 

Sorry this post is so lengthy. I did not have time to write a shorter one. Stay safe.

Good to hear someone thinking about it and not pushing an agenda.

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We are actually living with many viruses that are incurable and for which vaccines and treatments only mitigate the severity of the disease.  Herpes Simplex and Herpes Zoster, once contracted, stay with you for life.  For interesting discussions, see This Week in Virology on Youtube.   You may be surprised to find what a huge problem viruses are.

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