The Delta variant was a warning shot; we can't yet spare any vaccines. Credit: Amarjeet Kumar Singh/Anadolu Agency via Getty

I am in uncharted waters. Next week, it will be one year since I had my first jab; I got my second in August 2020. I was on the AstraZeneca trial – I still am, until the end of this month – so I got vaccinated before it was cool. There’s almost no data on whether people who had the vaccine a year ago are still protected, for the simple reason that almost nobody had had the vaccine a year ago.
And the existing vaccines were designed to mimic the original strain of Covid. We’ve been broadly lucky so far – the vaccines all still work against the variants we’re aware of. But they work less well against the new Delta variant; a Lancet paper last month found that people who had had the Pfizer vaccine had a reduced immune response to the new variant, and a recent Public Health England report says that a single dose of either Pfizer or AstraZeneca only reduces the likelihood of infection by about 33%.
I don’t want to be too downhearted. It is worth remembering that even though we don’t have data from this vaccine, on the whole the immune system has an excellent memory, and vaccine protection usually lasts for years. And a double dose of either vaccine is much more effective, even against Delta: PHE says 60% in the AZ case, 88% with Pfizer. And they are much more protective than those headline figures against severe disease and death: another PHE paper finds that people who have had both jabs, of either vaccine, are more than 90% less likely to end up in hospital.
But Delta is a warning shot. We might well see a new variant – I was going to say Epsilon, but apparently we’re already up to Kappa – which escapes the vaccines even more effectively.
That’s why we need to start talking about third jabs.
If we want to maintain the freedoms we currently have, and certainly if we ever want to get rid of the disease, we are going to have to have a third innoculation. “The virus is very likely to remain endemic, for the next year at least,” says Dr Rupert Beale of the Crick Institute. Even with everyone double-jabbed, Delta is transmissible enough and vaccine-resistant enough to keep circulating.
The latest SPI-M-O modelling suggests that it has an R0 of seven. (R0 is the number of people the average infected person spreads the disease to, in a population that has no immunity and no countermeasures against the disease.) If that’s true, then somewhere around 85% of people would need to be fully immune to reach herd immunity. With two jabs in every arm, we still wouldn’t reach that. In that situation it may not kill all that many people, but it will not go away, either.
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