The Dose - COVID Vaccines Save Lives, But We're Chasing a Moving Target
Episode Date: November 19, 2021Vaccines have saved thousands of lives and are an incredible tool in the seemingly endless battle against the coronavirus. But even with COVID surging anew in Europe as winter approaches, the rate at ...which Americans are getting vaccinated has plateaued.  On the latest episode of The Dose, Alison Galvani, founding director of the Yale Center for Infectious Disease Modeling and Analysis, and Eric Schneider, M.D., senior vice president for policy and research at the Commonwealth Fund, bring listeners up to speed on the state of the pandemic.  Galvani and Schneider have been using data to show how effective the vaccines are at preventing deaths and hospitalizations — and how, in the absence of successful vaccination campaigns, we are still losing people to the virus. Increasing vaccine uptake through mandates and administering boosters will help curb this pandemic. But to stave off future threats, it’s vital that we also strengthen the public health system and make it easier for all Americans to access health care, they say.
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The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation dedicated to healthcare for everyone.
The coronavirus continues to be a moving target, evading scientists and healthcare professionals
alike. The thought of entering a second pandemic holiday season is daunting, but this winter,
unlike the last, we have a very powerful tool to fight the virus, vaccines. I'm Shanwar Sirvai,
and on today's episode of The Dose, we're going to talk about how vaccines have changed the course
of the pandemic. My guests are Alison Galvani, the founding director of the Yale Center
for Infectious Disease Modeling and Analysis, and Eric Schneider, Senior Vice President for Policy
and Research at the Commonwealth Fund. Alison and Eric have been using data to show how vaccines are
saving lives and where, in the absence of successful vaccination campaigns,
we are still losing people to the virus. Allison, Eric, welcome to the show.
Thank you.
Great to be with you, Shanar.
So it's November. The holidays and the winter are around the corner. As this pandemic drags on,
I want to ask the question that I imagine everyone in the world would love to know the answer to.
Are we near the end? Well, unfortunately, I don't think we're near the end. The virus has
demonstrated itself to be able to evolve rapidly and more transmissible variants that,
to some extent, partially evade pre-existing immunity is a real
concern. Yeah, I would just add that it appears that COVID will become endemic, is becoming
endemic in the U.S. for sure. Even though COVID is not influenza, the pattern could very much be
like influenza, getting booster shots each year. Okay, so if this isn't the end, then how do we characterize this moment? Eric,
you and I have sort of talked about this as a race.
Yeah, I think we're certainly further along in the race than we were. But with millions of people
still unvaccinated, the risks of hospitalization, serious illness, death are still pretty high for a large segment of the American population and of the world's population.
Okay, so then let's move on to your research.
What are you focusing on right now and what are the most pressing questions?
I'll start from the Commonwealth Fund perspective. We have been interested in the challenge of getting vaccines to the entire population and particularly to those who are most at risk.
We knew from prior experience with influenza vaccine and other voluntary vaccines that the U.S. doesn't have a very robust system for distributing vaccine. We've certainly achieved higher levels of vaccination
against COVID than for some other vaccines. But we're now at as much as 60% of the population
vaccinated among high-risk individuals, as high as 80. The challenge is to get to everyone who
could benefit from the vaccine. Allison, what are you working on?
So currently, in collaboration with Eric, we're focused on comparing the costs of vaccination
versus the medical costs and productivity losses that have been averted by vaccination.
That's interesting. Tell me what you're finding.
Well, so it can be hard to appreciate the effectiveness of public health measures because
successful measures lead to the absence of bad outcomes.
So with modeling counterfactual scenarios, we are able to evaluate how much worse the
pandemic would have been if it had not been for the vaccination campaign.
So we found in our work with Eric that the vaccination campaign that was implemented has already saved well over 200,000 lives and averted more than a million hospitalizations.
It also blunted the repercussions of the more transmissible variants that have emerged, such as the Delta variant. I mean, I want to take a minute to just talk
about how incredible that is. 200,000 lives saved, a million hospitalizations averted.
Did we ever dream that the mRNA vaccines would be as effective as they are?
I think we may have dreamt it, but I would have been happy with a much lower efficacy
vaccine and was just delighted to see above 90% efficacy for averting deaths and hospitalizations
against the original COVID variant. And then you did mention Delta briefly. So let's come back to
that because Delta complicated things. Alison, can you tell me about how Delta complicated the work
that you're doing, the models that you're looking at? Sure. So with the emergence of more transmissible
variants, we are chasing a moving target. So as transmissibility increases,
the level of herd immunity needed to stem transmission simultaneously increases.
Such a shifting landscape makes vaccination all the more important. Conversely, the lower the
vaccination coverage, the higher the probability that novel variants will emerge,
because each infected individual gives the opportunity for the virus to mutate and evolve.
Explain that to me in a little more detail. What does that mean for public health and for our
safety? Every time a person is infected and the virus is replicating, there's a probability of mutation. Of course, there's
some mutations that don't lead to higher transmissibility, but when a virus mutates
into a more transmissible form, just through the process of natural selection, it's likely to
sweep through the population more rapidly and displace the previous strains.
So basically what you're saying is that the more unvaccinated people there are,
the more likely it is that we are creating welcoming hosts for the virus to mutate.
Exactly. So let's talk about what the most urgent problems
we have to grapple with now are. Eric, can you talk about the challenges that we're seeing,
even as vaccinated people have breakthrough infections?
Yeah, sure. And I think this is why it's so important that primary vaccination reaches as
many people as possible,
because unvaccinated people are more likely to transmit the virus and the variants.
And we know now that immunity from the vaccines wanes, that there are breakthrough infections,
and that after six months, people can become infected even if they've been vaccinated.
So the more virus is out in the community circulating, the more likely
it is that even people with a prior vaccination will also get infected. I saw an estimate recently
that as many as a third of people in the hospital are people who've been vaccinated previously.
So the immune systems may not have responded or they have waning immunity. It's still much lower
frequency. It's much less risky if you're vaccinated, but
that will be a problem going forward. And that's the reason for the booster campaigns.
Are you looking at the boosters in the modeling work that you're doing and how the booster campaign
is impacting the course of the pandemic? We haven't yet, but with the implementation of
different vaccination strategies, such as the
introduction of boosters and vaccination in children, we will be looking to incorporate
those aspects. Can you predict what you'll see when you incorporate these aspects?
Well, boosters reduce the mortality and hospitalizations. But if we had a choice between fully vaccinating someone
that currently is unvaccinated versus a booster for someone that's already had two doses,
it's going to be more effective to vaccinate the unvaccinated person. That doesn't mean that it's not highly cost effective to give
boosters to mitigate severe outcomes. I want to focus on what you just said, Alison, because
we are in a global pandemic. And we're seeing that, you know, in the poorest countries in the
world, vaccination rates are still very low,
some even in the single digits. And you just said that it is more effective to vaccinate an
unvaccinated person than to give a vaccinated person a booster. How are we going to end a
global pandemic if we don't address low vaccination rates in other countries? Well, globally, we do need to
address low vaccination in other countries. And there are a number of tools. There are actually
new vaccines on the horizon that are low cost and don't require cold chain. So one challenge with Pfizer in particular, but both Pfizer and Moderna,
they require stringent cold chain, which is challenging to maintain in countries that
have low resources. Eric, what are your thoughts about getting higher rates of vaccination
globally? It's clearly a necessity to get the rates up globally.
The supply is abundant. It's sort of a tragedy, actually, that the U.S. has abundant supply. We
have enough vaccine to vaccinate every American, yet we have pockets of unvaccinated people.
We're actually just getting underway on vaccinating children who are an important
reservoir for transmission. I think the more that wealthy countries can do to make sure that manufacturing capacity
and distribution happens around the world, the less likely it is that new variants will
boomerang back and cause the sorts of problems that we've seen over the last year and a half.
Let's talk a little bit about these unvaccinated pockets, because, you know, you've looked at states where vaccine uptake
is lagging, like Florida and Texas, and you're able to show how many lives we've lost in these
states for that reason. So tell me what you're finding and what we can do about it.
Sure. So by August, a number of states, including Vermont, Massachusetts, and Connecticut,
surpassed over 70% coverage of their adult populations, while coverage in other states,
such as Florida and Texas, were below 60%. We found that if the vaccination pace in Texas had matched that achieved in the Northeast,
over 30,000 hospitalizations and more than 6,000 deaths could have been averted.
Similarly, in Florida, comparing the vaccination program that they rolled out and the coverage
they achieved with what could have been achieved,
they could have reduced hospitalizations by over 60,000 and deaths by more than 16,000.
That analysis was consistent with some other work on vaccine deserts with Ariadne Labs creating a
vaccine equity planner that enables state officials to look at where vaccine is not
readily available to populations where low vaccination rates exist. So that's part of
an effort to try to get vaccination increased in many of the rural areas now where vaccine rates
are low. Are there other characteristics of places where vaccine rates are low? You mentioned rural
areas. Well, I never imagined
that public health measures would become politically polarized, but the propagation
of vaccine hesitancy by some conservative leaders and conservative media costs lives. So we do see
discrepancies based on political affiliations in different regions.
I did also want to ask, Alison, you know, you've talked about how your modeling work focuses on
deaths and hospitalizations. What about cases? Why aren't you focusing on that as much?
Oh, so we absolutely are incorporating cases. In fact, that's fundamental
to the modeling. It's a transmission model. And the first layer are infections to keep track of
infections. I just didn't specifically mention infections because of paramount concern are the deaths and hospitalizations. But cases are
important. They're key to transmission. Even asymptomatic cases can lead to transmission.
And in fact, we showed in previous work that the majority of transmission occurs from people in the pre-symptomatic phase and who are
asymptomatic. So silent transmission from people who aren't exhibiting any symptoms.
Right. But how do we solve a problem like that? I mean, it sounds impossible to me.
It does make control of COVID more challenging than a lot of diseases because symptom-based
mitigation, such as temperature checks, would miss everyone in the pre-symptomatic phase
and those asymptomatic infections.
So this is, again, why we come back to why vaccination is so critical because it averts
the cases to begin with. And then also non-pharmaceutical
measures such as mask wearing are key as a compliment because even if someone feels well,
they could still be shedding the virus. I'll just say also along with masks,
testing, rapid testing is the other strategy that can be really useful in this context
if people are infected and don't know it.
I wanted to ask, since we have been talking about silent transmission, how the pandemic has changed the modeling work you do more broadly for epidemiology.
Is this pandemic reshaping the science around modeling? Well, we're using the same modeling approaches that we have in the past.
But for every disease, we need to take into account its unique clinical features.
We know that COVID is unusually transmissible in the pre-symptomatic phase.
So that's a key component to incorporate.
And our models also take into account asymptomatic transmission. And COVID is quite unusual in
having such high transmissibility during the pre-symptomatic phase. Most diseases,
people don't become really infectious until after the onset of symptoms,
which makes the control of other diseases more straightforward based on symptoms.
Eric, would you mind, since we work together, I know this, would you mind talking about your
own experience gathering with people where everyone's fully vaccinated?
Sure. And I think it's a cautionary tale. I was at a dinner with a couple dozen other people.
People had their masks off because we were eating. And it turned out that there was a person at the
dinner who had an asymptomatic infection. Because we were doing rapid antigen testing,
we became aware that that was the case within about 12 hours.
The good part was that everyone was able to take precautions right away to prevent further transmission. The unlucky part was that I got a breakthrough infection. I was about six months
after my vaccine. I had to go into isolation, had symptoms. I actually lost my sense of taste and
smell. It was a very strange virus, unlike others I've experienced. I was very fatigued, some low-grade fevers, and had to isolate for 10 days. Fortunately, I mostly recovered a
month or so later. And fortunately, I was able to take precautions and not transmit the virus to
other people around me. It's very scary. And particularly, you know, I look back to how many
times over the past 18 months I've asked you for advice, and even taking all the
precautions you did, you still found yourself in a situation in which you got a breakthrough
infection. Yeah, I just saw a good study on this recently that what's called the secondary attack
rate, the likelihood that a person will infect other people around them, even when everyone's
vaccinated, it seems to be about one out of four will have a breakthrough infection. So it's something we're going to see as we have really opened up when people are out in restaurants,
dining, traveling. It's likely over this wintertime that we're going to see a surge nothing like what
we saw probably a year ago, but I don't think the virus is done with us yet.
So let's shift now to where policy comes in.
What can policymakers do to get more people to take the vaccine? Clinicians are among the most trusted messengers. And we're taking lessons learned from the first phase of vaccination of adults.
And I think those are being applied now to the pediatric population.
And then many places are moving to mandates.
And the Biden administration issued a regulation through the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration, OSHA, requiring mandate vaccination for people who are employed by companies with more than 100 employees.
That's been challenged in court, as one would predict it would be. But the OSHA mandate for
worker safety has stood the test of time in prior court challenges. So it does appear that mandates
are very effective. Yeah, I agree. Given the plateauing vaccination rates, mandates are necessary to
curtail the pandemic. Some people may not like mandates, but they are effective and necessary
to save lives. I think we've become numb to the death toll, still over a thousand a day. I mean,
that's more deaths each and every day than Australia has had over the
entire pandemic. Just because we're done with COVID doesn't mean that it's done with us.
Alison, do you have any sense of the impact of long COVID on vaccinated people?
Well, I do expect that the vaccine is averting long COVID in that we know it averts
cases. Although you can have a mild infection and still suffer from long COVID, I expect that
more severe infections are more likely to lead to long COVID. So by vaccinating and preventing severe symptoms,
we're probably going to also be reducing long COVID and in the people even who get infected.
And Allison, are you concerned that there may be more virulent strains of the virus yet to come? Absolutely. I mean, we've seen the emergence
of one strain after another that's more transmissible and in some cases had higher
case fatality. So I'm very concerned about that. And then, of course, we're going to see other pandemics in the future. Are we prepared for the next pandemic? And have we learned U.S. was slow to act, to implement testing, to even
have personal protective equipment for healthcare workers. That should be straightforward to maintain
a stockpile of personal protective equipment. And, you know, listening to the scientists, it just, unfortunately, we had
some political leaders that disregarded the science.
I think the other vulnerability that the pandemic revealed is that we've underinvested in public
health for years, but we really need a significant investment in modernizing and upgrading our public health systems. We really had no effective surveillance system for early detection of COVID virus entering
the country.
And being able to have that sort of rapid response, but also have the public health
officials in place with the data they need to generate estimates of community transmission,
forecasts of community transmission in local areas. We're just living in a world where it's really a necessity now to have the sort of
capabilities to monitor data and create a situational awareness of where new pandemic
threats may be emerging and how they're entering the population.
So do you think that next time we will have this surveillance in place?
We certainly will be in a better position to create those systems.
The jury's still out.
There's a large amount of federal money now invested in what's called public health data modernization.
But we don't have the ease of exchange data between our health care providers, pharmacies, public health officials to be able to get real-time
data on what's happening. We sort of cobbled together some systems to allow us to report
on cases and hospitalizations. Alison, do you have any final thoughts?
I think when people are hesitant to seek healthcare and to be diagnosed due to financial barriers, it's all the more challenging to
pick up on emerging and spreading infections. The federal government is covering COVID testing,
you know, vaccination. The pandemic has underscored the weaknesses of the American healthcare system. And hopefully next time,
everyone in the U.S. will have access to healthcare,
have a primary care provider,
and will not hesitate to seek medical care
when they need it.
Alson Galvani, Eric Schneider,
thank you so much for joining me today.
Thank you, Shannara. It was a pleasure.
Thank you so much.
This episode of The Dose was produced by Jodi Becker, Carl T. Wright, Naomi Leibovitz, and Joshua Tolman.
Special thanks to Barry Scholl for editing, 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.
Our website is thedose.show.
There you'll find show notes and other resources.
That's it for The Dose.
I'm Shannur Sirvai.
Thanks for listening.