The Dose - A Marathon, Not a Sprint: The Race Between COVID-19 Vaccines and Variants
Episode Date: March 26, 2021If you’re an optimist, then every piece of good news about vaccine approvals and shots in arms has put the end of the pandemic in sight. If you’re a pessimist, then all the new variants with names... sounding like computer-generated passwords signal the apocalypse. Will hope win, or will dread? On the latest episode of The Dose podcast, Eric Schneider, M.D., talks about the high-stakes race between the quick-spreading variants of COVID-19 and the effective vaccines that more Americans receive each day. Schneider brings us up to speed on the state of the pandemic and the challenges ahead. Drawing on his expertise in public health, he explains how we can “break the back of the virus” and ultimately win the race. Share your stories of pandemic optimism or pessimism—send an email to thedose@commonwealthfund.org.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund,
a foundation dedicated to health care for everyone.
When you look back to this time last year, late March, what's the one thing you feel you were most
wrong about? Yeah, it's hard to look back a year, given what we've been through. But I'm pretty sure the thing
I was most wrong about was that I had a solid belief that the federal government, in particular
the CDC, would act to contain the virus. I had known for 20 years as a public health faculty
member that the government had a pandemic preparedness plan. That was a plan they
developed after a 9-11 anthrax scare. It was updated several
times during H1N1, and it was actually war-gamed not too long ago by the Department of Homeland
Security under the Obama administration. So I thought, of course, they'll execute the plan,
and we should be fine. The brutal winter surge of COVID-19 appears to be slowing down, and the number of Americans
getting vaccinated is going up.
But the pandemic is far from over, in part because the virus is mutating.
Many variants detected abroad are spreading across the U.S., and unfortunately, some spread
faster and more easily than others.
I'm Shanwar Sirvai, and on today's episode of The Dose, we're going to be talking about the race between the COVID-19 variants and the vaccine.
My guest, Eric Schneider, is a doctor and senior vice president for policy and research at the Commonwealth Fund.
Eric has been tracking the spread of the pandemic closely,
and I've asked him to bring us up to date on the challenges ahead. Eric, welcome to the show.
Thank you for having me, Shanar.
So Eric, are we in a race between the COVID-19 vaccines and the variants?
Yes, yes, we're in a very high stakes race. We're lucky that vaccine production is accelerating.
Many states are getting better at putting shots in arms.
But the variants are exploding, especially in Europe.
They've been detected throughout the US, especially B.1.1.7, which is a serious threat.
It's more contagious.
It's more lethal, we're now learning.
We can't ignore right now the other tool that we have to win the race against the virus, and that's masks and distancing. Even if we took
just those two actions, we could break the back of the virus and the variants. If we wear masks,
avoid eating indoors in close quarters and restaurants and bars. Even if businesses and schools reopen,
we know that masks and distancing can be as effective as vaccines at slowing the spread.
And we even know from some studies that mask mandates are effective, which means that relaxing
them is likely to cause problems. So Eric, why didn't the U.S. institute a mask mandate? It's an American unwillingness
to give up liberties that makes Americans resistant to mandates of all kinds. You know,
seatbelts were sort of my favorite example from public health. It took years to pass seatbelt
laws in states, even though we knew they reduced death. And Americans have a
relatively low trust in the federal government. That said, when there are mask mandates in states,
even states like Texas, which prioritize liberty, people do tend to follow them. And it, like I say,
the evidence shows that those mandates are effective. Are you worried about what's going to happen in Texas now that the governor has recently
lifted the mask mandate?
Yeah, I'm very worried.
I mean, the past is prologue in this case.
We've had people ignoring lockdowns in Arizona.
We saw it in the Dakotas.
We saw it in Southern California.
And the reopening too soon repeatedly has shown us that there'll be a week or two where
it looks like things are going okay. And then the virus will find more susceptible individuals.
Okay, so let's talk about this new threat, the variants. Why are we worried about them,
especially if more and more Americans
are getting vaccinated every day?
Well, there are two reasons to be worried.
One is that even if more and more Americans are vaccinated,
the transmission will really only slow
once we reach what's called herd immunity,
which most people believe is above 60%
of people have to be immune, might be as high as 70 or 80%. And actually with the variant B.1.1.7,
the herd immunity threshold would have to be even higher because it's greater contagiousness and
higher likelihood of killing people mean that more people would have to be immune in some way,
either vaccinated
or naturally. There's also a worry that the variants can reinfect people who've already
been infected with a different variant. And then third is the worry that the vaccines won't be as
effective against the variants. So we're really using our vaccine strategy and our masks and
distancing public health measures to control the virus at a level
where the variants don't emerge,
where they can't take hold.
Because even with vaccination,
we could end up in the fall in a situation
where the virus is still transmitting,
it's still reaching people who are susceptible,
it's reinfecting people who've already been infected once
and causing all the problems
that we've seen over the past year.
So as we are vaccinating the adult population, I understand that there is an attempt to develop
vaccines that are safe for children, but we're still a long way away from the point at which
children would actually be getting these vaccines. Can we talk
more about that? Sure. So we're actually just beginning clinical trials. One of the vaccines
is started in children less than 12. Vaccinating children is tricky because children have a much
lower risk of severe illness or death from the virus. And so the clinical trials to prove that the
vaccine is effective take larger numbers of people over potentially longer amount of time.
We may not find ourselves able to recommend on an evidence-based vaccinating children until
sometime next year because of the just the time it takes to do these studies.
The good news is that we know that children are less likely to transmit
coronavirus in general, especially those under five, and we've also seen that it's
possible in many studies to open schools safely as long as protocols are followed
around ventilation, distance, masks, wearing,
and testing of teachers on a routine basis and testing of students potentially.
So let's shift gears a little bit and talk about, again, what the vaccine is allowing people to do.
CDC guidelines say that fully vaccinated people can be indoors together with each other.
And people are really itching to gather again.
They want to go indoors to restaurants.
They want to celebrate.
A lot of things have been put on hold for this last year.
What's going to happen when fully vaccinated people do start gathering in large
numbers? Yeah, we're going to be in a sort of middle phase here where many people are vaccinated,
many people are not. And that's going to complicate things. And CDC is likely to be cautious about
their guidance on this. And here are the issues that the vaccines are not 100%
effective. They never are. 95% is outstanding. But with the variants coming in and the possibility
of mutations, the effectiveness of the vaccines could be somewhere between 60 and 90%. So that
means that there is still a risk, even though the risk is much lower. It's not eliminated or it's not zero.
So even vaccinated people gathering, there'd be some risk that a transmission could occur.
We're still gathering evidence, too, on how effective the vaccines are at reducing transmission.
We know they can prevent severe illness and death, hospitalization. What we are less sure about is
how well they prevent transmission. There's some
emerging evidence that they may be very effective at reducing transmission as well. And once that
evidence is clearer, there will be a possibility of reducing the restrictions even more and
allowing people to gather without masks and around a table. But again, this is going to be a sort of
ongoing process.
People have likened it to a dimmer switch where we may have to turn it up or turn it down.
The restrictions will turn up or turn down depending on what we understand about the
effectiveness of vaccines and what the community transmission rates are. At the end of the day,
that's actually the thing that most determines the risk level is how much transmission is
happening in your community, your local community. And of course, there's variance in the rates of transmission in the US.
But on an international level, it is actually quite astounding. And we don't understand why
some countries have been hit much, much harder than others. We have seen very different responses, though.
Can we talk about why some countries have done much better
at responding to the virus than others?
Sure. So this is a fascinating area.
And I think international comparisons in general are complicated.
There's so many factors that differ between countries,
geography, culture,
economics, and a variety of other things. Countries have had different experiences,
like I said earlier, with prior infections. So if you look at Taiwan, China, South Korea,
New Zealand, they've been all very effective at controlling the virus, getting it under
control to the level where people can go about normal life.
But each of those countries is so different from the U.S. culturally and by size, by their ability
to control who enters or leaves the country. So the comparison I find most instructive is
actually with Australia. The U.S. and Australia share a common sort of historical origin and a frontier.
They have federal and state governments and a mix of public and private insurance.
They have also high levels of inequity that are a result of their cultural history of
minority indigenous communities oppression.
The coronavirus experience, despite all those similarities, has been remarkably different night and day between the U.S. and Australia.
Australia instituted lockdowns early.
They instituted travel restrictions between countries and within the country.
They had strict quarantines for people entering the country.
And they really hammered the virus down to zero right at the outset.
And then they had outbreaks in the summer
last year, and they instituted very comprehensive regional lockdowns whenever cases appeared.
The results of all of that have been stunning. The U.S. has over 530,000 deaths at this point.
Australia has experienced fewer than 1, thousand deaths, only 900 deaths in
the past year. And the last deaths in Australia were recorded on October of 2020, as best I can
tell. Their economy is open at this point because they've contained the virus and kept it contained.
So Australia sounds like a real success story. But what about Europe? When we think about countries like Germany, which are also similar to the US large federal structure, and very strong resilient healthcare systems? Why has Germany been hit so bad, especially with this most recent winter wave. Yeah, it's interesting. Germany was one of the
success stories early on. They had control of the virus throughout most of 2020. And people were
actually speculating about why Germany's case fatality rate was so low as well. And in retrospect,
it's probably mostly related to the way the virus entered the population. It was
mostly younger people initially, travelers coming from outside the
country, but they were very good early on testing and containment strategies. What
might have happened later is somewhat the politics that we've seen in the US
where there was a very active anti-mask, anti-restriction, anti-lockdown movement that got underway in the fall.
And Europe in general had eased travel restrictions among the countries quite a bit over the summer months.
And it's very likely that a lot of virus was introduced into the various European countries because of those limited travel restrictions. And then what about this other big mystery, which is the developing world? I think perhaps with the
exception of Latin America, rich countries have been hit much, much harder than poor countries.
Do we have any idea why this is the case?
Yeah, there's quite a lot of speculation about this paradox.
There's a general belief that developing countries are more susceptible to infectious
disease threats, and that has been the case with things such as Ebola and other infectious
diseases.
There's a report out of the UN Conference on Trade and Development from December of
2020 that speculated that it's probably a
combination of underreporting of deaths and less widespread testing and case counting.
But that doesn't really explain all of it, even if the undercounting were significant.
The other things seem to be at work and other features that we've seen in other countries,
even the U.S., that areas with lower population density, where a larger share of the
population lives in rural areas, tend to have a slower spread, at least initially. And in
low-income and middle-income countries, many more people live in rural areas,
or a higher proportion live in rural areas compared to high-income countries.
There's also something about the way the disease enters the population. I was struck that really air travel is what spread the virus initially from China to all of the other countries in the world. And it's possible that low and middle income countries were spared initially and then had time to develop containment measures like testing, quarantine, and contact tracing. Low and middle income countries generally invest quite a lot in public health containment
because of their weaker healthcare systems, they realize they have to be effective at
prevention.
There's still a concern ultimately that the low and middle income countries, and we're
seeing it in some countries already, Brazil and others, that they will ultimately be hit
hard because of the infrastructure challenges.
In the United States context, this has been a very sobering conversation.
Is there any hope on the horizon that we can look to? Yeah, there are a few things that, in what seems like a sea
of darkness, otherwise give me hope. And maybe I'm just an optimist. But the first is, and this
has been noted by others, we're incredibly lucky to have the science that's given us three and
probably additional effective vaccines. If we can produce and distribute these vaccines effectively and
quickly, we could really escape further carnage.
And this is actually an unprecedented accomplishment in the history of science.
It's a new technology platform that we'll be able to use in the future.
So I'm optimistic the vaccines will eventually help us get this under control. The other interesting glimmer of making
lemonade out of lemons, I suppose, is that there's been a political shift in the U.S.
and we've just seen the passage of an almost historic relief legislation that is addressing
many of the issues that the pandemic has revealed about inequality in our country and the effects
of poverty, particularly for children. Whether it's a durable turning point, we don't know. But
the effort to reduce childhood poverty is something that was unimaginable at the start of
2019 as the economy was humming along. And then the other hope I still hold is that we'll learn
a lesson about pandemic preparedness.
We've so underinvested in our public health infrastructure and practices. These are the
things that have protected other countries, and they could protect us from the next emerging
disease threat. We tend to rely on our ability as the richest country in the world to just spend
on medical care and rescue people.
That's a general orientation of our system. But these people didn't have to be sick in the first
place if we had taken the proper prevention measures. So I think it's a good time to get
those pandemic preparedness plans out of the trash cans. We're seeing that start at CDC and
other agencies and really to take a hard look at what investments
we need to make to strengthen public health so we can prevent or mitigate a future pandemic.
As you talk about childhood poverty and sort of supporting the most vulnerable parts of
our population, and also about strengthening public health. It does sort of diminish the glory of the vaccines
for me because we're lucky to have these vaccines, but we're not doing a great job at reaching those
who need them most. Can we talk about the vaccine distribution problem?
Yeah, we've had successes and challenges. I think
the successes are the nursing homes. They were the first to get vaccinated. We've seen death rates
falling in nursing homes. Willing healthcare workers have been vaccinated. That's reducing
the level of stress of our healthcare workforce. The embedded inequities in our system really are
coming to light in the way our vaccine is rolling
out.
We have trouble vaccinating those who are at the greatest risk of contracting and dying
from COVID-19.
If you just think about the offer on hand to someone who has been in the healthcare
system, actually has not been in the healthcare system, they can't get access to a doctor.
They don't have insurance coverage.
They have insurance, but it's not enough.
Their employer won't let them take sick leave.
There are all these barriers for many people in the US
among the working poor and the poor
to getting healthcare at all.
And then we turn around and come to them
and offer a vaccine and say,
we want you to come and get a vaccine. You can't help thinking, why wouldn't people be suspicious of that? You've never been
able to give me access to any other thing I needed from the healthcare system. I can go to the
emergency room, sure, or I can just sort of tough it out at home. And now suddenly I'm supposed to
trust you when you say you want to give me a vaccine. There are solutions. People
are implementing solutions. They're trying to reduce the friction around vaccine appointment
websites and the need for tech savviness to get scarce appointments. The mass vaccination sites,
they're beginning to now go to federally qualified health centers and community health centers and
pharmacies where people don't have to drive for hours
when they don't have cars.
There's much more dedication
to getting the vaccine into mobile units
so you can reach people who aren't able to travel.
So I think we're seeing some progress.
It's uneven.
Some states are doing better than others.
And this challenge will continue to be with us
even as the supply of vaccine increases.
Are you hopeful that we will also see a shift in some of the ways in which we build trust,
we reach out to communities that have historically been under-resourced?
Yeah, I worry that we're treating vaccination rollout as a one-off. In the interest
of speed, we're sacrificing an opportunity to strengthen local public health departments and
strengthen primary care. There's been a lot of commitment to mass vaccination sites, pharmacies,
and sort of alternative vaccination sites that bypass the delivery system, if all that
infrastructure goes away, and we still have the public health system and the primary care clinics
that are underfunded, we'll have missed a terrific opportunity. And that would be tragic.
One of my recent guests, Magdala Sherry, talked about how there hasn't really been a real apology to communities of color.
And so now we talk in terms of vaccine hesitancy, but we don't reflect upon the fact that Black,
Latinx, Native American populations have been so badly hit by this disease. And we haven't really reckoned with the national blame we should
for the impact on these populations. Yeah, I think that's right. The mistrust runs deep,
and I think the trust has to be earned by the system. Apology would certainly be a first step.
It wouldn't be enough.
And I don't think it can be just about vaccines.
I think it should be a reckoning with all of the health services that have been unavailable
because of structural racism, the financing of our health care system, some of the predatory activities around people who are facing surprise
bills or other healthcare bills that they just have no chance of paying back because of their
income. And I think until we are reckoning with all of those issues and really making a commitment
to all health services being equitably and fairly available, it's very hard to overcome the legacy.
So Eric, I have one final question, if you don't mind. Can you tell us if you have been vaccinated?
I have not yet successfully navigated the websites, but actually I'm not eligible yet.
So I feel fortunate that I'm in a position to wait my turn.
And so when you are able to get vaccinated, what's the one thing that you can't wait to do?
Well, I am really eager to share a meal with my children and grandchildren around a table with our masks off. And if
President Biden's announcement was correct, it seems like that could be a real possibility
by July 4th. All right. Well, I hope you get to have that meal. And thank you so much for
joining me today. It's been a real pleasure, Shanur. Thank you. The Dose is hosted by me, Shanur Sirvai.
I produced this show for the Commonwealth Fund,
along with Andrea Muraskin, Naomi Leibovitz, and Joshua Tallman.
Special thanks to Barry Scholl for editorial support,
Jen Wilson and Rose Wong for our art and design,
and Paul Frame for web support.
Our theme music is Arizona Moon by Blue Dot Sessions
with additional music from Poddington Bear.
Our website is thedose.show.
There you'll find show notes and other resources.
That's it for The Dose.
Thanks for listening.