Omicron Better Able to Evade Vaccines Than Earlier Variants
In a small study, Omicron appears to ward off vaccines, but those vaccines still carry plenty of wallop against the variant, and boosters enhance protection, say experts.
The Omicron variant of COVID-19 seems better able to escape the protection of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine than previous iterations of SARS-CoV-2, according to the first study that measures Omicron’s reaction to vaccination.
However—the study by the Africa Health Research Institute (AHRI)—actually underscores the need for vaccination, because it
AHRI’s executive director Willem Hanekom said in a statement that “most vaccinologists agree that the current vaccines will still protect against severe disease and death in the face of Omicron infection. It is therefore critical that everyone should be vaccinated.”
The AHRI study comes a day after Pfizer/BioNTech
It also comes during a debate over the legitimacy of vaccine mandates in the United States. Many
On November 29, Judge Matthew Schelp of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri,
Amd just yesterday, as
In the AHRI study, investigators tested the resilience of Omicron in blood from 12 people who’d gotten the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, 6 of whom had been infected by COVID-19. The AHRI’s Alex Sigal posted on
The bottom line for Segal is that “there is a very large drop in neutralization of Omicron” with the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine. Segal added on Twitter that “Omicron escape from BNT162b2 neutralization is incomplete. Previous infection + vaccination still neutralizes.” Nonetheless, there was a 41-fold reduction in neutralization against Omicron compared to the Beta variant, a substantial drop but investigators note that vaccines and boosters should be able to keep Omicron at bay.
The study may bolster the push by some medical experts to change the definition of fully vaccinated from 2 doses to getting 3.
Anthony Fauci, MD, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the chief White House medical advisor, tells CNN that it’s a matter “of when, not if” the definition fully vaccinated changes.
“I don’t see that changing tomorrow or next week, but certainly if you want to talk about what optimal protection is, I don’t think anybody would argue that optimal protection is going to be with a third shot.”
Newsletter
Related Articles
- Bug of the Month: I'm Older Than Empires
September 16th 2025
- Top 5 Infection Prevention Articles of Summer 2025
September 16th 2025
- From Outbreak to Zoopocalypse: 11 More Must-Watch Viral Thrillers
September 15th 2025
- Debunking the Mistruths and Misinformation About COVID-19
September 15th 2025
- Bug of the Month: I Like to Hitch a Ride
September 12th 2025