- Joined
- Jan 17, 2004
- Messages
- 42,915
- Reaction score
- 126,867
87% of the breakthrough cases were people who are 60 and over.
What I understood from the article is that in December 2020, in Israel, older adults and adults with other health issues were vaccinated first. By April, most Israelis over the age of 12 were fully vaccinated.
The vaccine is good for 6-8 months after the second shot. I'm assuming this means first and second shot were delivered as recommended, not 4 months apart. What Israel is experiencing, from my understanding, is that those who were vaccinated first (in this case older adults) were the first to experience "breakthrough" cases: 60% of covid breakthrough hospitalizations are double vaccinated. That is, older and vulnerable adults who received two vaccines in December are the first to have "breakthrough" cases in July/August. Theoretically, in 6 months, everyone who had the second vaccine in June will be vulnerable to the "breakthrough" between December and February.
The article questions whether "breakthrough" is the correct term; whether breakthrough is inevitable for all double vaccinated people after 6-8 months. Further, the question is how to do better with a vaccine.
I don't think it's a good idea to return to the idea that it only happens to old people. That's what they said at the beginning of the pandemic, and today hospitals are filling with children and young adults.
A grim warning from Israel: Vaccination blunts, but does not defeat Delta