The P&R Plague Thread (Covid-19)

Sure. But there seems to be some building momentum towards the idea that some sort of immunity comes with having had Covid. Like you, I'd be very interested in that statistic. Vaccine or not, it matters.
I'd especially like to see the immunity data for different variants of covid. For example, someone who had variant alpha might not have much immunity to variant delta. The vaccines are much more effective against the variants that are not delta, so I'd pretty surprised if immunity to delta was acquired to someone who had non-delta. With the vaccines, we at least can track the data, but with natural immunity it's a crap shoot.

 
loomer really should learn more about her diet if she has had several cases of food poisoning at her young age.   i am 59 and have had exactly 1 case of food poisoning in my life.  i can confirm that covid was worse for me than my case of food poisoning.   

 
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I'd especially like to see the immunity data for different variants of covid. For example, someone who had variant alpha might not have much immunity to variant delta. The vaccines are much more effective against the variants that are not delta, so I'd pretty surprised if immunity to delta was acquired to someone who had non-delta. With the vaccines, we at least can track the data, but with natural immunity it's a crap shoot.


Wouldn't both be a crap shoot at some point? I mean, if vaccine efficacy wans over time and not everyone has a strong immune response to the vaccine, will we ever really know without testing for antibodies or some other testing? Either way, immunizations and infections are the only way out of this. At some point in time it will be endemic. 

 
I'd especially like to see the immunity data for different variants of covid. For example, someone who had variant alpha might not have much immunity to variant delta. The vaccines are much more effective against the variants that are not delta, so I'd pretty surprised if immunity to delta was acquired to someone who had non-delta. With the vaccines, we at least can track the data, but with natural immunity it's a crap shoot.
I believe some of that is in the link I shared to @NebraskaHarry .  I think previously infected Covid people had better immunity to Delta than vaccine immunity 

 
Wouldn't both be a crap shoot at some point? I mean, if vaccine efficacy wans over time and not everyone has a strong immune response to the vaccine, will we ever really know without testing for antibodies or some other testing? Either way, immunizations and infections are the only way out of this. At some point in time it will be endemic. 
Sure, but it's all about getting to the point where it's endemic and no longer epidemic. Infections are the way to overload hospitals and cause unnecessary deaths. Vaccines are the way to minimize hospitalizations and deaths. I think it's abundantly clear one path to getting back to normal is WAY better than the other.

And if there's some way to show empirically that people have the "correct" antibodies (or whatever the right concepts are here) to be immune or have sufficient immunity, then I'm all in favor of testing everyone and counting it that way instead of by vaccine card. But right now we don't have that capability AFAIK. (We can count antibodies, but I haven't seen anything that could translate that into an immunity measure.)

I believe some of that is in the link I shared to @NebraskaHarry .  I think previously infected Covid people had better immunity to Delta than vaccine immunity 
Previously infected by which variant? I'm sure people who had delta probably have a better resistance to delta, but what about the people who had covid last year (i.e. one of the previous variants)? Are they as immune to delta as the vaccine or others who have had delta? There's a lot of variables and natural immunity isn't as easy to gather evidence due to lack of control groups. The vaccines are much better studied and understood simply because the studies are much more controlled.

 
Sure, but it's all about getting to the point where it's endemic and no longer epidemic. Infections are the way to overload hospitals and cause unnecessary deaths. Vaccines are the way to minimize hospitalizations and deaths. I think it's abundantly clear one path to getting back to normal is WAY better than the other.

And if there's some way to show empirically that people have the "correct" antibodies (or whatever the right concepts are here) to be immune or have sufficient immunity, then I'm all in favor of testing everyone and counting it that way instead of by vaccine card. But right now we don't have that capability AFAIK. (We can count antibodies, but I haven't seen anything that could translate that into an immunity measure.)

Previously infected by which variant? I'm sure people who had delta probably have a better resistance to delta, but what about the people who had covid last year (i.e. one of the previous variants)? Are they as immune to delta as the vaccine or others who have had delta? There's a lot of variables and natural immunity isn't as easy to gather evidence due to lack of control groups. The vaccines are much better studied and understood simply because the studies are much more controlled.
Infected prior to Delta coming into the US

 
Sure, but it's all about getting to the point where it's endemic and no longer epidemic. Infections are the way to overload hospitals and cause unnecessary deaths. Vaccines are the way to minimize hospitalizations and deaths. I think it's abundantly clear one path to getting back to normal is WAY better than the other.

And if there's some way to show empirically that people have the "correct" antibodies (or whatever the right concepts are here) to be immune or have sufficient immunity, then I'm all in favor of testing everyone and counting it that way instead of by vaccine card. But right now we don't have that capability AFAIK. (We can count antibodies, but I haven't seen anything that could translate that into an immunity measure.)

Previously infected by which variant? I'm sure people who had delta probably have a better resistance to delta, but what about the people who had covid last year (i.e. one of the previous variants)? Are they as immune to delta as the vaccine or others who have had delta? There's a lot of variables and natural immunity isn't as easy to gather evidence due to lack of control groups. The vaccines are much better studied and understood simply because the studies are much more controlled.
Page 630 of this thread. Not sure if it’s totally what you are asking though.  It does speak to Delta as a follow up period 

 
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