added value of a booster.
“Each time we are boosting with these vaccines, our immune responses may be getting broader and not narrower in protecting against the scope of variants we are encountering,” Dr. Albert Ko, an infectious-diseases physician and epidemiologist at Yale’s School of Public Health, told the Washington Post. Protection against the array of variants two years into the pandemic is “pretty amazing, whether you’re getting the primary series or that boost.”
Even after four months, the 78% effectiveness in preventing hospitalizations is “…another argument that getting boosted now will prepare you better when you need to get boosted again in the face of new variants,” Ko adds.
While a booster’s protection declines more over time in preventing visits to urgent care or emergency departments, Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, an infectious-diseases physician at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, also noted the robust protection against hospitalization, even after four months.
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The study does not provide the level of detail to know whether people were going to urgent care clinics for “a little sniffle,” she tells the Post. “That’s not the same thing as coming into the ICU and needing to be intubated.”
“I honestly think we were unrealistic early on in conveying the idea that vaccine efficacy should be primarily characterized by protecting from infection,” Marrazzo says. “As variants evolve and get better at infecting us, what we’ll need to focus on is mitigating the consequences.”
A second study in the Feb. 11 issue of the CDC publication Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report found that booster shots are safe overall, and tend to produce fewer side effects if you get a third dose of the same mRNA vaccine as your initial series.
For that report, the CDC reviewed data from two of its vaccine safety monitoring systems, v-safe and the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS).
The investigators found that people 18 and older who received the same mRNA vaccine brand for all their vaccinations actually experienced fewer adverse reactions following the booster dose than they did after their second dose.
About 92% of reports to VAERS were not considered serious, and headache, fever, and muscle pain were among the most commonly reported reactions. V-safe data found medical care was rarely needed after a booster dose.
About 91 million Americans have received boosters. Nearly 8 million had gotten their boosters at least four months ago, according to CDC data.
The CDC still insists that vaccines and boosters are the safest protection against COVID. In a statement, the CDC said boosters are “safe and effective” and the study shows that a third dose of mRNA vaccine “continues to offer high levels of protection against severe disease, even months after administration, underscoring the importance of staying up to date when eligible after receiving a primary series.”
Visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more on COVID boosters.