Immunocompromised people make up nearly half of COVID-19 breakthrough hospitalizations – an extra vaccine dose may help
- Written by Jonathan Golob, Assistant Professor of Infectious Disease, University of Michigan
References
- ^ CC BY-ND (creativecommons.org)
- ^ U.S. Food and Drug Administration (www.fda.gov)
- ^ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ receive a third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ nearly half of the vaccinated people hospitalized (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ rate of breakthrough cases among vaccinated people who are not immunocompromised was less than 1% (www.kff.org)
- ^ physician scientist specializing in infections in immunocompromised patients (medicine.umich.edu)
- ^ weakened immune systems (www.hopkinsmedicine.org)
- ^ T cells and B cells (theconversation.com)
- ^ B cells make antibodies (www.verywellhealth.com)
- ^ T cells kill off virus-infected cells (www.verywellhealth.com)
- ^ kill or decrease the effectiveness (medlineplus.gov)
- ^ hampered response (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ follow different vaccination guidelines (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ routinely revaccinated against such infections (doi.org)
- ^ particularly severe and long-lasting infections (dx.doi.org)
- ^ prolonged viral shedding (theconversation.com)
- ^ ideal environments for the virus to evolve and adapt (www.vox.com)
- ^ were not included in the initial COVID-19 vaccine trials (doi.org)
- ^ subsequent studies (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ organ transplant recipients (doi.org)
- ^ intentionally hamper antibody development (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
- ^ pilot trials in organ transplant recipients (doi.org)
- ^ as many people vaccinated (www.nytimes.com)
- ^ safely and effectively (doi.org)
- ^ consistently wearing masks (www.cdc.gov)
- ^ Sign up for The Conversation’s science newsletter (theconversation.com)
Authors: Jonathan Golob, Assistant Professor of Infectious Disease, University of Michigan