After months battling the COVID-19 pandemic, the idea of “herd immunity” is back in the news.
This has been stoked by reports about the White House’s new pandemic advisor, Scott Altas, who has argued in favor of ending social isolation measures and simply allowing healthy people to get infected. The idea is that the virus wouldn’t spread as quickly once enough people became immune. But trying to reach herd immunity without a vaccine would be a disastrous pandemic response strategy.
As mathematics and computer science professors, we think it is important to understand what herd immunity actually is, when it’s a viable strategy and why, without a vaccine, it cannot reduce deaths and illnesses from the current pandemic.
What is herd immunity?
Epidemiologists define the herd immunity threshold for a given virus as the percentage of the population that must be immune to ensure that its introduction will not cause an outbreak. If enough people are immune, an infected person will likely come into contact only with people who are already immune rather than spreading the virus to someone who is susceptible.
Herd immunity is usually discussed in the context of vaccination. For example, if 90% of the population (the herd) has received a chickenpox vaccine, the remaining 10% (often including people who cannot become vaccinated, like babies and the immunocompromised) will be protected from the introduction of a single person with chickenpox.
But herd immunity from SARS-CoV-2 is different in several ways:
1) We do not have a vaccine. As biologist Carl Bergstrom and biostatistician Natalie Dean pointed out in a New York Times op-ed in May, without a widely available vaccine, most of the population – 60%-85% by some estimates – must become infected to reach herd immunity, and the virus’s high mortality rate means millions would die.
2) The virus is not currently contained. If herd immunity is reached during an ongoing pandemic, the high number of infected people will continue to spread the virus and ultimately many more people than the herd immunity threshold will become infected – likely over 90% of the population.
3) The people most vulnerable are not evenly spread across the population. Groups that have not been mixing with the “herd” will remain vulnerable even after the herd immunity threshold is reached. Furthermore, it is impossible to fully isolate vulnerable populations while everyone else goes back to normal.
Also read: Why Covid-19 herd immunity may be closer than we believed so far
Reaching herd immunity without a vaccine is costly
For a given virus, any person is either susceptible to being infected, currently infected or immune from being infected. If a vaccine is available, a susceptible person can become immune without ever becoming infected.
Without a vaccine, the only route to immunity is through infection. And unlike with chickenpox, many people infected with SARS-CoV-2 die from it.
By Sept. 1, more than 184,000 people in the U.S. had died from COVID-19. This figure includes children and others in low-risk groups, and the disease can have lingering health consequences for those who survive. Moreover, scientists don’t yet know the extent to which people who recover are immune from future infections.
A vaccine is the only way to move directly from susceptibility to immunity, bypassing the pain from becoming infected and possibly dying.
Also read: Why the race for a Covid vaccine could do with a few speed bumps
Herd immunity reached during a pandemic doesn’t stop the spread
An ongoing pandemic doesn’t stop as soon as the herd immunity threshold is reached. In contrast to the scenario of a single person with chickenpox entering a largely immune population, many people are infected at any given time during an ongoing pandemic.
When the herd immunity threshold is reached during a pandemic, the number of new infections per day will decline, but the substantial infectious population at that point will continue to spread the virus. As Bergstrom and Dean noted, “A runaway train doesn’t stop the instant the track begins to slope uphill, and a rapidly spreading virus doesn’t stop right when herd immunity is attained.”
If the virus is unchecked, the final percentage of people infected will far overshoot the herd immunity threshold, affecting as many as 90% of the population in the case of SARS-CoV-2.
Proactive mitigation strategies like social distancing and wearing masks flatten the curve by reducing the rate that active infections generate new cases. This delays the point at which herd immunity is reached and also reduces casualties, which should be the goal of any response strategy.
Herd immunity does not protect the vulnerable
People who are particularly vulnerable to COVID-19, such as people over 65, have been urged to stay inside to avoid exposure. But full isolation in our society is impossible, so the greater the number of active cases, the greater the risk to these vulnerable people.
Even if the herd immunity threshold is reached by the population at large, a single infected person coming in contact with a vulnerable community can cause an outbreak. The coronavirus has devastated nursing homes, which will remain vulnerable until vaccines are available.
How to respond to a pandemic without a vaccine
Without a vaccine, we should not think of herd immunity as a light at the end of the tunnel. Getting there would result in many more needless deaths in the United States and would not protect the most vulnerable.
For now, testing and contact tracing, wearing masks, and social distancing remain the best ways to lessen the destruction of COVID-19 by flattening the curve to buy time to develop treatments and vaccines.
This article has been republished from The Conversation under a Creatives Commons License. Read the original article here.
Also read: There’s very good news about coronavirus immunity & reinfection, Iceland study says
@Simple Indian:
You just read a 1000 word article on covid. I bet the author didn’t use the word covid/herd infection more than a dozen times. If you had a few brain cells, you would use them to understand the article. Instead you had to use India like 10 out of the 100 words you wrote that make no sense. Stop spamming and shaming India it’s a beautiful country with responsible citizens.
Not everyone who gets the virus is dying. How many people died from other causes and covid 19 was listed as cause?. Tell us the true survival rate.
Ohh! ! What’s your view on lakh n crs of labourers who were made to migrate from kanyakumari to kashmir n assam to Ahmadabad with protocol. U got fed by media on muslim media trail. Even, mum court gave clean chit. .. .i thing u missed it?
It’s surprising as to why we in India have to hear a Westerners views on Covid whose mortality rates are far different from ours. In fact, no one in the Indian Media wants to even talk about the ‘voluntary exposure experiment’ by the Indian Muslims who just had their own take on Covid from the beginning and who quite largely did not follow the protocols. Despite that they did not suffer the virus as they could potentially have. Secondly, the Indian Media had written off the Dharavi slums in April and May. But, lo and behold, they came out as winners. Clearly, there’s something quite simple that is happening much to the disgust of the statisticians and the media, as today India’s infection rates are rising while the mortality and recovery rate are performing as one of the best in the world. Let’s not forget that there are at least 3 times the amount who are not tested, while the numbers of death are just the same, in fact lesser due to roads being used less. Finally, the Indian Media will never give the credit to the Indian Immunity, which is why people are not taking the Indian Media with any seriousness as all that it has done is to spread fear and anxiety.