Kind: captions Language: en [Music] back in december 2020 we did an episode when the pfizer biontech moderna and oxford astrazeneca vaccines were on the horizon it was an exciting time we have to be vigilant but i do think a safe and effective vaccine is the silver bullet i mean we don't see polio we don't see smallpox this is what vaccines do this vaccine will be doing its job if a year from now we don't have this virus in our lives and i absolutely look forward to thanksgiving 2021. um uh it better be a big feast and it will be if we do this right yet here we are at the beginning of august 2021 and these are the headlines america's coveted recovery has hit a dangerous roadblock the united states topping 100 000 new coronavirus cases just friday a stunning fourth wave hospital admissions surging to more than 6 000 a day the highest number of patients since february dr anthony fauci warned this latest surge driven by the delta variant will get worse remember when we were just dreaming about getting vaccines for coba 19 well they're here and surprise the pandemic still is as well we've got the emergence of new variants of the virus and infections continue to spread across most of the world in the meantime people have questions can the vaccines handle the new variants and wait do we need booster shots and there are still a lot of folks who wonder are the vaccines safe today we'll get you answers and talk about just what it'll take to get to the other side of this pandemic this is nova now where we give you the shot of science behind the headlines i'm alok patel i'm speaking with monica gandhi md an infectious diseases doctor and professor of medicine at the university of california in san francisco i want to get into all the positive news about vaccines and then a little bit of a reality check and so you know we've seen vaccines roll out and a lot of the optimism in the beginning was based on clinical trial data and now we're getting more real world data so i'm wondering if you can clear up a little difference for everyone out there of efficacy versus effectiveness and what we know about the vaccines today the word efficacy is the outcome in a clinical trial and that already blew us away in terms of what the johnson johnson the moderna the pfizer the sputnik the covaxin i mean actually all of the vaccines looked really good in terms of that outcome of efficacy did it prevent disease symptomatic disease in the clinical trials and then we saw all this real world effectiveness data effectiveness meaning how does it look in the real world and these are looking really good in the real world and actually if you stick to one outcome and one outcome alone that of preventing severe disease the real world effectiveness of these vaccines is quite astounding it's why 99.7 of the people in the hospital right now in the united states are unvaccinated eligible adults uh not those who are vaccinated our headlines are flooded right now with things about the variance rightfully because delta variants kind of wild but for the unvaccinated people out there what is it about the delta variant that makes it so contagious yeah it's true this delta variant is different it is more transmissible there was this question for a while oh is it just more fit and it's knocking off the other viruses no no no there are higher viral loads in the nose of people who get infected with delta variant and then really their mechanism of action is they think it replicates faster it's basically shortened the period of incubation so you get higher viral loads in your nose so if any unvaccinated eligible adult is walking around they are susceptible to any variant that is more transmissible that has a higher viral load and again i want to distinguish adults because children are not able to be vaccinated less than 12 but we are not seeing increased hospitalizations among children due to the delta variant but the big news lately has been about breakthrough infections people who are fully vaccinated but still test positive for covid and may even develop symptoms now we expected some vaccinated people would be infected but breakthrough infections still appear to be relatively rare with current data showing infections in less than one percent of vaccinated people but out of the millions who are vaccinated that comes out to be large numbers that make worrying headlines i just wanted to ask you to differentiate what we see and what we know about breakthrough cases versus all the other positive cases from cover 19 that are presumably from the delta variant yes i want to divide it into three categories of breakthrough let's start with asymptomatic breakthroughs if you are vaccinated you don't have any symptoms someone happens to swab your nose and your viral load is low viral load is determined from a pcr test that's a vaccine success you just proven that you saw the virus and you won but then there are some breakthroughs where vaccinated people do get sick symptomatic breakthrough is real meaning there are people who get symptoms that are mild with a breakthrough infection with more with a delta variant so it gets into your nose it takes you a while for your b cells to kick in so b cells are the ones that produce those antibodies it's going to come out and kill it but it may take a bit and that bit of time unfortunately will result in something like a cold-like symptoms or even you can feel like you have the flu at its worst um and that there are those symptomatic breakthroughs but they're not putting people in the hospital in any way shape or form and then the third type of breakthrough is a severe breakthrough infection those are rare to give you a sense of how rare here's a quick breakdown as of july 26 the cdc reported more than 163 million people in the u.s had been fully vaccinated against cova 19. of those 163 million 0.004 percent are patients that have been hospitalized with breakthrough infection and less than 0.001 percent of breakthrough infection cases have resulted in death or just about eight in a million so it doesn't mean this isn't working because what did we promise with the vaccines we promise to turn it in to one of those circulating coronaviruses that we don't care about actually because we get colds which are those endemic chronoviruses but the promise of the vaccines were never that you wouldn't get anything happening in july there was a major cluster of breakthrough cases in provincetown massachusetts which helped convince the u.s centers for disease control and prevention that vaccinated people could still spread the virus leading the cdc to update its mass guidance it now recommends masking up indoors again in areas with high rates of cover whether you have the vaccine or not it's also a good idea when you're around children under 12 who aren't vaccinated or anyone who's high risk such as the immunocompromised that's partially because right now they don't want vaccinated people in a store with a high viral load to be around an unvaccinated person and they certainly don't want someone who has a mild breakthrough infection to pass it on but the delta variant it is a different beast and as bad as a delta variant is we know that as long as the virus is still in circulation it'll continue to evolve meaning more variants may be headed our way the vaccine's main job is to give the body a way to remember how to fight that virus in the future so if the virus mutates will the body be able to use that memory to fight it is there any scientific proof that we could see a variant that is able to withstand our vaccines okay so i have two very optimistic ways to explain why i do not think that we're gonna get a variant that's going to evade our vaccines the two arms of the immune system they are called b cells and t cells so b cells are the ones that produce antibodies and your antibodies over time to anything a vaccine or a natural infection are going to go down in your bloodstream over time if they didn't your bloodstream would be so thick you couldn't move so all those proteins are going to go down but it's the memory b cells those cells can actually keep a template and adapt the antibodies they produce to changes in the virus that should thwart future lookalike variants those are the blueprint that will produce new antibodies if you need them in the future we know these vaccines produce memory b cells there is another study from oregon health sciences university that showed that if you see a variant in the future that blueprint of those memory b cells are just going to come out and produce an antibody that is adaptive towards that variant they see the zeta variant in the future they are going to produce antibodies that are directed against that variant but they don't store antibodies in their surfaces they come out and produce the antibodies to exactly what they see the second reason is t cell immunity [Music] t cells are one type of cell that make part of your immune system they find and destroy infected cells in your body to prevent infections from spreading for covid the vaccines train the immune system including t cells to target a protein specific to this virus the spike protein this byprotein is made up of 1273 amino acids little building blocks so mutations of a dozen or so are not likely to make our vaccine ineffective the spite protein will still look like a wanted criminal to our t cells i think about a spike protein that is so long and say the delta variant or the epsilon variant or any variant has 12 to 13 mutations across the spike protein t cells like think of them as soldiers that march up and line up across the spike protein if you have 13 mutations 14 mutations 20 mutations you still have t cells that are going to attack that virus if they see the virus in the future so i am very hopeful we just got to get through what's going on now the question of how immunity from vaccines fades over time is still an open area of research while some of the vaccine companies and manufacturers have been pushing for boosters for this reason there's no clear data on that yet but understanding how vaccines empower the immune system gives gandhi reason to believe healthy people will do fine for quite a while without them for the majority of people are immuno-competent i see zero need for boosters because going back to those memory b cells those memory t cells if your antibodies wane which is natural is that a glitch of the immune system it's like a natural adaptive thing that you may have fewer antibodies in your nose because you know that's waning but your memory b cells will happily produce them for you when you need them so while she thinks this means most people don't need a booster yet there are data to show that certain people do there was a very nice paper from israel that looked at who are getting severe breakthrough infections and that's the population where you'd want to think about a booster and that was massively immunocompromised patients so organ transplant recipients there was also some elderly patients who had multiple comorbidities like multiple medical conditions and then also a group that's emerging as the morbidly obese and those three populations are the ones that i think the cdc is already considering and will likely recommend boosters for okay so there are variants out there like delta that are huge threats and the vaccines can help us handle that threat so you might be wondering we've had vaccines now for eight months why are covered cases still rising well it comes down to this having the capacity to do something doesn't necessarily mean you'll do it after the break how nations around the world respond to outbreaks of disease like covid and unfortunately this past year and a half has offered a very good example of a lot of things not to do welcome back so it's been almost two years since covid first emerged why haven't we beaten it yet here's where we need an epidemiologist jennifer nuzzo doctor of public health is at the johns hopkins bloomberg school of public health and is a senior scholar at the center for health security she also directs the outbreak observatory its mission is to build our understanding of what works against biological threats we know about so we're ready for whatever hits us next they've studied hepatitis a in the u.s ebola and the democratic republic of the congo and measles outbreaks in both countries they've seen how hospitals have been overwhelmed by previous flu seasons raising concerns about whether we'd be prepared to face something worse so in december of 2019 i was actually on holiday with my family just before new year's and i got a note from my team and somebody suggested you know there's this strange outbreak that's happening in china some people think it could be sars you know maybe we should cover that on january 2nd 2020 the observatory wrote their first blog post on this novel respiratory virus which was soon all anyone was talking about on the news china has identified the cause of the mysterious pneumonia outbreak in ohan city and it's from the same family that caused the deadly sars epidemic 17 years ago it's a new type of coronavirus you are never going to forget that holiday with your family are you no the last taste of freedom then there was the inkling of what was to come jennifer nuzzo co-led the development of the global health security index which measures how equipped countries are to handle bio threats they scored 195 nations considering numbers of hospitals and laboratories doctors and nurses and the strength of viral surveillance systems they also weigh political socioeconomic and environmental risk factors just a few months before covett went global their report showed that of those 195 nations no country was ready for a serious pandemic some countries like the united states the united kingdom had more capacities than others but no country was fully prepared no country had everything were there any countries that did surprise you in terms of either how poorly they responded the pandemic or how well they did the united states one factor in particular has undermined u.s efforts to deal with cobit from the very beginning and it continues today public confidence in government which has turned out to be a really critical arguably cross-cutting factor in our ability to use many of the resources that we have our abilities to convince people to go and get tested if they found that they have cobid 19 our ability to convince people to take protective actions like wearing masks and avoiding crowded indoor spaces you know our abilities to vaccinate people now lack of trust in government and people who are delivering the messages you know really kind of takes a stab at all of those things a lot of us in october we saw people dying we saw cities getting shut down and we sincerely thought the minute a vaccine is approved americans will run out and go get the vaccine are you or were you surprised at the level of vaccine hesitancy in this country no not surprised i expected there to be hesitancy as a pediatrician i've dealt with parents who've declined vaccines for a variety of reasons including concern over side effects so yeah this hesitancy is nothing new but side effects don't have to be scary they mean your immune system is working actually these vaccines the mrna vaccines and the adenovirus dna vaccines which is the johnson johnson do elicit a very robust immune response this is monica gandhi again they elicit both antibodies and then importantly very strong t cell responses remember those t cells that fight infections and help remember past infections and so having symptoms after a vaccine like feeling pain at the injection site fever even malaise not feeling great muscle aches you are going to have those side effects that is your body forming a robust and effective immune response but most of the hesitancy around cova 19 vaccines has been driven by more than fears of aches and pains back to jennifer nuzzo we got a little bit of foreshadowing when we were studying the measles outbreaks because we were starting to hear from public health officials about basically disinformation campaigns that they had noticed that were incredibly sophisticated you know health department told us about how someone had spoofed their email to make lies look like they were coming from the health department really an orchestrated attempt to try to actively discourage people from getting vaccinated but even with this precedent the extent of disinformation surrounding covid shocked jennifer nuzzo very early in the vaccine rollout and we heard about a tremendous amount of resistance among health care workers to get vaccinated now it wasn't the doctors and the nurses who were seeing patients but it was other people in the health system who should have seen the impact kovid was having on their hospital and their community but in many cases they were resistant to getting vaccinated in part out of a belief that the virus was a hoax and so that to me that is quite stunning to have that level of just false belief in places in populations that you think above all should know really i mean struck me as a far bigger problem than we've ever dealt with before family and friends play an important role in convincing those around them to get vaccinated jennifer nuzzo says it's going to take a concerted effort from all of us not just the medical community to get enough people out there to get the shot i have become increasingly convinced that we need bigger solutions and the spreading online of the amount of disinformation that's out there is killing us literally killing us she cites research from the center for countering digital hate on what they're calling the disinformation dozen almost two-thirds of the online lies about vaccines are spread by just 12 highly influential personalities these are people who have made businesses out of spreading lies 36 million dollar industry for these 12 individuals who you know in some cases employ bloggers and people in multiple countries to try to spread the disinformation u.s surgeon general vivek murthy has issued an advisory on how misinformation is hampering our efforts against kovid new york city health commissioner dave a chokshi has written an open letter to twitter and facebook ceos to root out those responsible for planting untruths on their platforms and because the forces of disinformation are so insidious especially on social media jennifer nuzzo encourages us to feel compassion for those who are taken in by these campaigns start from a place of empathy one thing i have commonly found among the people that i talk to who have these beliefs is they first of all talk about not knowing who to trust and not knowing where to go for their information and when i ask them can you talk to your doctor it is very common that they say they don't have one for people who have not benefited from the medical establishment for much of their life who have probably had trouble accessing it and have not been able to come to see it as a resource to them to suddenly now have this new tool that's here to save them you know i think we have to understand the forces that have created susceptibility to this misinformation and to try to at least hear people out in why they feel a certain way and why they're scared jennifer nuzzo is taking every route possible to get the correct information out into the world even serving as an advisor on the movie borat subsequent movie film in the film the covet shutdown forces borat to stay in the home of two conspiracy theorists where is everybody i do not see anybody on the street it's everybody's at home they're telling them to stay inside so they don't spread this virus there's a violence yes they want everybody to quarantine i do not have nowhere else to go could i stay in your home she then appeared in the follow-up documentary series debunking borat addressing the myths from the film working on that project in particular was um really a privilege in debunking borat um i got to talk to two gentlemen who you know probably have beliefs that align with q anon believers you know i think when you hear about these things on the news we have a tendency to kind of like other people and think that they're not like you but these are two gentlemen who are just trying to figure out their way in the world just like the rest of us you know they're trying to take care of their families and take care of themselves in the same way and just unfortunately they've along the way accumulated beliefs that i think are hurting them more than they're helping them i think we have to constantly be in in feedback mode where we take in what people's complaints are so that we can understand if we need to do something differently but it seems like it literally is just a matter of vaccine distribution to contain this pandemic that's that's what it's going to take am i correct in in just saying that that boldly like this is just a matter of getting vaccines out there the return to normal is only going to be achieved through immunity and there are two ways to do that you can get vaccinated and be protected against severe illness or you can get the virus and play roulette one of the biggest challenges is the fact that people who don't have symptoms potentially can spread it and that just makes control without vaccines much much harder to do and in particular you know these new variants are potentially shortening the incubation period the period of time for which you you're exposed to potentially you can transmit it that makes it even harder to intervene using contact tracing and isolation and quarantine to try to stop transmission so really important that we vaccinate which brings us back to the question of boosters and how that discussion's impacting parts of the world where people want the vaccines but can't get them because that's part of the reason why i think countries are holding on to vaccines that they're not using as opposed to sharing it with the countries in the world right now who have not even had the opportunity to give even their most vulnerable people a first shot it felt very premature to talk about booster shots in this theoretical sense the united states rather than talking about global vaccine equity that should be the priority right now correct from a public health perspective yes we need to make sure that it's not just us who has vaccines but the rest of the world because it's not going to serve us well if the virus rages in other parts of the world unchecked unfortunately when we're talking about vaccine equity and the ability to roll out vaccines and vaccine uptake all correlations lead to income so you know about 75 percent of the vaccines that have been administered in the world to date have been administered by about 10 high-income countries that is the single biggest predictor of not only who has access to vaccines but also who is starting to require vaccination for travel and require vaccine passports so inequities are going to compound and they are compounding along uh income lines so while in the spring and early summer life felt like it was starting to return to normal in some parts of the u.s in many parts of the world the variants were destroying lives and upending some country's success at controlling the virus particularly with the delta variant being as transmissible as it is a number of countries that had been previously great at responding to cobid are now having extraordinarily heartbreaking surges in cases and ultimately you know deaths delta is just outrunning those efforts and just making it near impossible so when i see places like australia which for the last year was not even wearing masks quarantining anybody who was coming into the country really being aggressive with their contact tracing efforts and testing despite all of that now having you know multiple cities under lockdown and no signs of of the spread of the virus abating despite those efforts you know really i think underscores the urgent need to vaccinate people as quickly as possible particularly the people who are most at risk of dying and to protect the health care workers who have the extraordinary levels of exposure we're not going to move on from this pandemic until we make sure that countries have vaccines to be able to protect their populations here's monica gandhi again we have had these vaccines authorized in this country since actually december 14th 2020. any death worldwide from covet 19 is essentially preventable and to me the fact that it's eight months later and counting and we haven't gotten all the health care workers vaccinated worldwide uh vulnerable people who are older it is so tragic it is such a moral and and ethical feeling i hate the delta variant i hate the delta variant too i hate it so much the delta variant is like just wrecking all this progress and for those of us who who were from india originally i have to say it was a very tragic time as you know my family was greatly affected as many of ours were affected in india by it and it was awful to hear them comment on our vaccine hesitancy so monica gandhi's and jennifer nuzzo's most important recommendation for everyone when it comes to the vaccines this incredible weapon we now have to fight coven 19. they are safe they are effective about 3.8 billion people have received the mrna vaccines worldwide now please take it just please get vaccinated folks let's end this [Music] nova now is a production of gbh and prx it's produced by terence bernardo ari daniel jocelyn gonzalez isabel hibbard sandra lopez monsalve and rosslyn tordesillas julia court and chris schmidt are the co-executive producers of nova suki bennett is senior digital editor christina monan is associate researcher robin kasmer is science editor kunal patel is research intern and devin robbins is managing producer of podcasts at gbh our theme music is injected with rhythm thanks to dj kidd koala we'll be back in two weeks and if you haven't been vaccinated yet and you live in the u.s you can visit vaccines.gov to access the vaccine finder a handy search tool where you plug in your zip code and find stocked vaccination sites local to you anywhere from clinics to pharmacies to churches to supermarkets are all doing their part to help us end this thing gbh