Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by corty 1915 days ago
Quite the same as if the vaccinations were causing herd immunity: Everyone who wants a shot will get one. Everyone on the vulnerable list should think really hard and really get a shot. The rest can suffer of their own free will.

Or: make vaccinations mandatory if you want to protect those who cannot get a shot for health reasons.

Remember, the reason is vaccination hesitancy or refusal. A perfect example of antisocial and stupid behaviour.

1 comments

> Or: make vaccinations mandatory if you want to protect those who cannot get a shot for health reasons.

To put this one in perspective, we already make vaccinations mandatory for public school attendance, and colleges go one step further and require vaccinations for attendance, too.

Does COVID vaccination prevent infection and transmission?
Thanks for sharing those. While encouraging, the first obvious issue is that "reduce" != "prevent". There's also the related issue of how long that partial immunity lasts: I think the conventional wisdom is that it won't be for decades or anything, but would love to know if I'm wrong.

Both of those factors make COVID vaccination quite different from, say, measles vaccination (~97% prevention, lifelong immunity), and seemingly more similar to the flu vaccine, which is not required by any schools (that I know of).

I didn't read the original study, but I think the 75 to 95% reduction is in the number of cases, not in viral load. So this would be, in other words, a 75 to 95% prevention.

As to the time the immunity lasts, that remains to be seen. Since it is brand-new, we will only know when new cases from previously-vaccinated people pop up. Maybe it'll be yearly, maybe a booster every 10 years, maybe lifelong. There is research showing that the antibodies from a corona infection last about half a year, but that is not the only factor that may provide immunity. And the yearly flu shot is because the flu virus mutates very rapidly, which corona doesn't as much.