Ask HN: Effects of Covid Vaccination on R0?
2 points| complexworld | 4 years ago | reply
I'm having a discussion about vaccination with a family member, and I'd like to have some evidence that I can show them.
2 points| complexworld | 4 years ago | reply
I'm having a discussion about vaccination with a family member, and I'd like to have some evidence that I can show them.
[+] [-] aurizon|4 years ago|reply
I said earlier that the virus was in a race, well it is, and it is a badly run and badly maintained factory. If the viral RNA used only perfect virus parts, and used them in the exact numbers needed for every stage - all the viruses would be infective. In truth, some people say less that 10% of the viruses made are correctly made and are infective - this varies with the virus. Measles virus make infective virus particles over 90% of the time = a very high R0, almost 20. A virus below 1 will die out. The first covid was about 2 to 2.5. The new Delta variant is said to be around 15. So more perfect particles coupled with a more efficient viral factory = the highest possible R0
There is an old saying, the wind my tear and the wind may roar, but you will never drown on Lac St Pierre - so long as you stay on the shore, that applies to covid. Get vaccinated, wear a mask, avoid groups/crowds etc. We criticise China, but their attention to isolation in detail has allowed them to crush the infection. These whining idiots of anti vaxxers/maskers - they are going to drown in the virus - unless they stay on the shore. That is from the Wreck of the Julie Plante - a French Canadian poem in argot. https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-wreck-of-the-julie-plant...
[+] [-] complexworld|4 years ago|reply
There are studies, but the ones I have found compare only people are infected. And when you have COVID you're contagious, vaccinated or not. This is then used as a basis for claiming: "See vaccinated are just as, or even more, contagious as unvaccinated!". That's what I'm trying to disprove.
Example of what I have found: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3...
[+] [-] jstx1|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] complexworld|4 years ago|reply
For society in general, the crux of his argument comes down to:
"Unvaccinated people are just as contagious as vaccinated, so why should I get vaccinated?"
I'm finding it surprisingly difficult to find unassailable evidence that vaccinated people are less likely to pass the virus on to someone else.