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Breakthrough Infection Study Compares Decline in COVID Vaccine Effectiveness: Pfizer vs Moderna vs J&J
https://scitechdaily.com ^ | 30 NOVEMBER 2021 | By PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE

Posted on 11/30/2021 8:01:30 AM PST by Red Badger

Study in Science of more than 780,000 Veterans is the first to compare waning protection rates across all three vaccine types available to most Americans and to directly report death rates after breakthrough infection.

A new study in the leading journal Science reviewed COVID-19 breakthrough infections among 780,225 Veterans, finding that vaccine protection declined from 87.9% to 48.1% during the 2021 Delta surge in the U.S. The researchers from PHI, the Veterans Affairs Medical Center and the University of Texas Health Science Center found a dramatic decline in effectiveness for the Janssen (Johnson and Johnson) vaccine, from 86.4% in March to 13%.1 in September. They also found that vaccination of any type was protective against death among infected individuals.

As COVID-19 breakthrough infections continue to emerge in some vaccine recipients and health authorities are developing policies around booster vaccinations, national data on COVID-19 vaccine breakthrough infections is inadequate but urgently needed. Now a study from the Public Health Institute, the Veterans Affairs Medical Center and the University of Texas Health Science Center published today in the journal Science analyzed COVID infection by vaccination status among 780,225 Veterans.

Researchers found that protection against any COVID-19 infection declined for all vaccine types, with overall vaccine protection declining from 87.9% in February to 48.1% by October 2021.

*The decline was greatest for the Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine, with protection against infection declining from 86.4% in March to 13%.1 in September

*Declines for PfizerBioNTech were from 86.9% to 43.3%

*Declines for Moderna were 89.2% to 58%.

Credit: Public Health Institute

While most previous studies have focused on the PfizerBioNTech or Moderna vaccines, the Science study is the first to compare protection declines across the three main vaccine types, and the first to show the comparably dramatic decline in effectiveness for the Janssen vaccine. Declines were assessed over the period February 1, 2021 to October 1, 2021, reflecting the emergence and dominance of the Delta variant in the U.S. Patterns of breakthrough infection over time were consistent by age, despite rolling vaccine eligibility, implicating the Delta variant as the primary determinant of infection.

Importantly, vaccination of any type was protective against death among individuals who did become infected. The relative benefit of vaccination for protection against death was greater for persons under 65 but was also very strong for persons over 65.

The study showed that the risk of death from COVID infection was highest in unvaccinated Veterans, regardless of age and comorbidities. While some breakthrough infections resulted in death, vaccination remained protective against death in those who became infected during the Delta surge.

For those under 65 years old, vaccines overall were 81.7% effective against death.

*Protection against death was greatest for the Pfizer vaccine, at 84.3%.

*Moderna was the next most effective, at 81.5%.

*Jansen was 73% effective.

For those 65 and over, overall vaccine effectiveness against death was 71.6%.

*Moderna was 75.5% effective.

*Pfizer was 70.1% effective.

*Jansen was 52.2% effective.

“Our study gives researchers, policymakers, and others a strong basis for comparing the long-term effectiveness of COVID vaccines, and a lens for making informed decisions around primary vaccination, booster shots, and other multiple layers of protection, including masking mandates, social distancing, testing and other public health interventions to reduce chance of spread,” said Dr. Barbara Cohn of PHI, the lead author of the study. “For example, the CDC recommendation for boosters for all Janssen recipients over 18 is supported by our results. And, given the declines in vaccine protection and the dominance of the more infective Delta variant, we urge swift action to promote primary vaccination, boosters and to also encourage masking, social distancing and other layers of protection against infection. This is supported by our finding that breakthrough infections are not benign, but also by the strong evidence that vaccination still protects against death even for persons with breakthrough infections, compared to persons who become infected and are not vaccinated.”

The FDA authorized Pfizer boosters for some groups in September and Moderna and Janssen boosters in October, and the CDC has made similar recommendations, including supporting a “mix and match” approach that allows people to choose any of the three vaccine boosters regardless of which they were given initially.

Reference: “SARS-CoV-2 vaccine protection and deaths among US veterans during 2021” by Barbara A. Cohn, Piera M. Cirillo, Caitlin C. Murphy, Nickilou Y. Krigbaum and Arthur W. Wallace, 4 November 2021, Science. DOI: 10.1126/science.abm0620


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Government
KEYWORDS: airforce; armedforces; army; chinavirusvaccine; coastguard; coronavirus; covid19; marines; military; navy; usmc; vaccination; vaccines; vaxeffectiveness; vaximmunity; veterans
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To: nagant

My “fully vaccinated’(Moderna) wife is home sick with Covid and more than “mild” symptoms. She has all the symptoms btw. I, on the other hand, unjabbed and uninfected after exposure. I credit the prophylactic protocol I’m following including Ivermectin.


41 posted on 11/30/2021 9:37:02 AM PST by 38special (I should've said something earlier)
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To: CaptainK

I just take 5 mg of melatonin nightly—the studies are showing that 10 mg though is what apparently keeps covid away.

I may go up again. I started taking melatonin when I hit menopause a couple of years ago—it helps with sleep issues. I think it’s hormone related. Also seems to keep away other things like inflammation and arthritis and dementia so it seems there is a lot of upside. We make less of it when we age I think.


42 posted on 11/30/2021 10:51:16 AM PST by olivia3boys
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To: olivia3boys

Thanks. I’ve tried 10 mg in the past but it knocked me out.
I’ll have to try it again.


43 posted on 11/30/2021 12:17:05 PM PST by CaptainK ("If life's really hard, at least its short")
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To: Jim Noble

What boosters would you recommend for someone who has had the J&J vaccine? A J&J booster? One additional mRNA booster? Two?


44 posted on 11/30/2021 4:05:51 PM PST by FreedomForce
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To: FreedomForce

I think J&J is basically over.

Now, I admit we do not KNOW that the size of the antibody response translates into a better outcome - but that’s how to bet.

So - the responses to a single dose of mRNA (either one) following J&J is much higher than a J&J booster.

J&J was supposed to release their two shot data in March or April. But they fell in love with “one and done”. Their two shot study wound up looking really good - but six months too late, the world has moved on.


45 posted on 11/30/2021 5:24:16 PM PST by Jim Noble (The nation cannot be saved until the GOP is destroyed)
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To: Seruzawa

Smallpox vaccine absolutely does not protect for life you are wrong. For those who handle smallpox professionally they get boosters every year. People who have exposure also get a booster if the original dose was more than three years old. Before smallpox was eradicated to travel to a smallpox country you had to have a booster every three years and a WHO yellow card to enter them proving you had the three year or less booster. Same for yellow fever , dengue or typhoid counties all still require yellow cards.

https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd/smallpox/index.html

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/i-was-vaccinated-against/

“Before smallpox was eradicated, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended that international travelers to nonendemic countries should be revaccinated every five to 10 years and travelers to endemic countries should be revaccinated every three years. Lab workers in diagnostic facilities and others more likely to be exposed to the smallpox virus were advised to be vaccinated once a year. “
A study of smallpox cases imported into nonendemic countries found that mortality was 52 percent among the unvaccinated, 11 percent among those vaccinated more than 20 years earlier and 1.4 percent of those vaccinated within 10 years. Therefore, vaccination 40 years ago most likely does not confer protection against smallpox infection,”

Knowledge is half the battle.


46 posted on 12/01/2021 5:02:36 PM PST by JD_UTDallas ("Veni Vidi Vici" )
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