US lagging European peers by vaccine doses and boosters, especially notable in age 60+
"On December 20, 30% of people in the US over-65 had gone six months since receiving a second dose, compared with just 2% in Portugal; 5 per cent in England; and 7% in Denmark."
Graphic that shows differences in vaccination waning for US vs England, Denmark and Portugal, age 60+
Brief update on Omicron, and its BA.1 and BA.2 lineages (sisters) 1. Origin—the 3 theories for how this hyper-mutated version of the virus evolved nature.com/articles/d4158…@nature
3. The BA.2 variant is spreading widely, throughout many countries in Europe and Asia, out-competing BA.1, indicating higher transmissibility. But the good news from yesterday's @UKHSA: vaccination + boost is holding up quite well; there's no indication of more immune evasion
2. The vaccine effectiveness (VE) vs Omicron symptomatic infection vs Omicron falls off 15+ weeks, as was seen with the Israeli data, here more so with Pfizer compared to Moderna
3. But protection (VE) vs Omicron hospitalization remains quite high (Moderna > 90% thru 9 weeks)
ICU admits may be the best proxy for lack of vaccinations. Israel and the US have low rates of vaccination (65, 63%) and have seen rising ICU rates in their Omicron waves (not seen in high vaxx % countries) @OurWorldInData
Clarification: Colors are swapped on the vaccine right-sided panels. Israel has slightly more 2-shot vaccination and >2X boosters
Important graph from @StavKislev that supports my point
How to reduce your chance of dying from Covid by 99%?
Get vaccinated and a booster.
One of the most impressive graphs I've seen for the impact of vaccination in the US pandemic
(thanks @redouad@OurWorldinData for re-plotting my makeshift graph from earlier today)
Highlighting the data above are for all ages
Graphs for vaccination vs deaths by age groups (w/o booster partitioned):
Now deaths by age groups: 65+, 50-49, 18-49
For each group, death is reduced by 99% for vaccination plus booster compared with unvaccinated (down to zero for youngest age group) ourworldindata.org/grapher/united…
What to make of Omicron's BA.1 and (sister) BA.2 lineages?
Both are hyper-mutated with over 50 mutations but many are different, particularly in the spike and ORF1a regions outbreak.info /1
There's not any functional or epidemiological data to show any meaningful differences....yet. But BA.2 has become dominant in Denmark, out-competing BA.1, and its prevalence is rising in India, Singapore, Sweden, the UK and other countries /2 Graph via @Mike_Honey_
The spread of BA.2 supports increased transmissibility (hard to imagine beyond BA.1, O's sister). On Jan 21st, UK designated it as a variant under investigation ft.com/content/34fef1… More to learn, keep 👀, no reason for distress at this point (we already have enough of that)
Debunking the notion that boosters don't reduce Omicron symptomatic infections. Another new study from Qatar shows they are halved medrxiv.org/content/10.110… matched >400,000 people with mRNA vaccines 2 vs 3-dose
Booster vaccine effectiveness vs Omicron infections 62% (2 dose 32%) @UKHSA in people without Prior Covid assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/upl…
and higher with Prior Covid, hybrid immunity, as seen in all studies