dsr-burnley
Well-known member
- Aug 15, 2014
- 2,625
I'm not saying you are wrong but its a lot more complicated than that. A very large UK study in the Lancet published on 29/10/2021 showed the following:
There is no statistically significant difference in the likelihood of you catching Covid from someone who enters your household who has Covid, between vaccinated (28% chance) and unvaccinated (38% chance) individuals.
Overall the SAR (SARS attack rate) is 26% whether you have been vaccinated or not. Just to be clear, you have a 26% chance of being attacked by COVID whether you are vaccinated or not.
The chance of being attacked by any airborne disease is unaffected by whether you have been vaccinated or not. Vaccines do not stop you breathing in the virus. What they do is help you fight it off. The vaccinated and unvaccinated alike will breathe in the disease, but the vaccinated will fight it off better, essentially because they start the fight earlier because their antibodies are ready to go.
It seems that this virus is at its most infectious early on. In the first few days, there is little difference in the degree of infection between the vaccinated and the unvaccinated, and hence (I understand) little difference in degree of intectiousness. After that, the unvaccinated have more infection that the vaccinated, but neither is particularly spreading the disease.