Covid-19 vaccines protect well against severe forms linked to the Delta variant

No offense to the antivax, vaccines against Covid-19 are indeed effective against the Delta variant. Fully vaccinated people are 11 times less likely to die from Covid-19 and 10 times less likely to be hospitalized since the contagious variant became the main strain of the virus in the United States, authorities announced on Friday (September 10). American sanitary facilities.

Data from three articles published by the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC), the country’s main federal public health agency, unanimously underscore the continued effectiveness of vaccines against severe forms of the virus.

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This announcement comes the day after the unveiling of President Joe Biden’s new muscular strategy to tackle the pandemic. In particular, a decree requires employees of large American companies to be vaccinated or to undergo a weekly screening test.

“As we have shown, study after study, vaccination works”, insisted the director of the CDC, Rochelle Walenksy, during a press conference. The first study analyzed hundreds of thousands of cases of Covid-19 in 13 US jurisdictions over the period from April 4 to June 19, before the Delta proliferated, and compared them to cases of contamination from June 20 to June 17. July.

Moderna significantly more efficient

Between these two periods, the risk of a fully vaccinated person being infected with Covid-19 compared to an unvaccinated person increased slightly, from 11.1 times less likely to be infected to 4.5 times . Protection against hospitalization and death remained stable, but declined more for people 65 years of age and older than for groups of younger individuals.

Health officials are currently assessing the need for a third dose, and older people are likely to be the first to receive it when the Biden administration launches its recall campaign on September 20.

One of the studies, which analyzed the effectiveness of different vaccines between June and August in more than 400 hospitals and health centers, determined that Moderna’s serum was the most effective against hospitalizations (95%), ahead of that from Pfizer (80%), and that of Johnson & Johnson (60%).

It is not entirely clear why Moderna’s vaccine appeared to confer higher protection than Pfizer when the Delta variant became the main strain of the virus. This could be related to its higher dosage of 100 micrograms versus 30 micrograms, or the longer interval between the first and second injection (four weeks versus three for Pfizer), which could create a stronger immune response.

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The World with AFP

www.lemonde.fr

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