WHY BOOSTER SHOTS ARE STILL CRITICAL, EVEN IF VACCINE POLICIES ARE RELAXED

Sunny Handa
3 min readMay 5, 2022

With some provinces taking steps to end proof of vaccination policies and COVID-19 infections hitting record numbers during the Omicron wave even among the vaccinated, experts say vaccines and booster shots still remain a critically important tool against the pandemic.

Saskatchewan ended its proof of vaccination policy on Monday, after Premier Scott Moe controversially said vaccines were not reducing transmission, a claim disputed and criticized by medical experts. Ontario also announced on Monday it would be accelerating its reopening plans, lifting vaccine requirements for all non-essential businesses on March 1 should “public health and health system indicators continue to improve.”

While scientists are still learning about the highly infectious Omicron variant, there is strong data that suggests getting a third shot of a COVID-19 vaccine helps curtail the overall transmission and severity of infections. What is less clear is what happens when someone is boosted and becomes infected.

In other words, the odds of becoming infected with COVID-19 when an individual is triple-vaccinated are lower compared to someone who is not. While protection against Omicron is not nearly as robust compared to previous variants, experts say it does not mean there is no protection at all.

Even if Omicron evades vaccine protection more often compared with the Delta or Alpha variants, having more layers of protection is better when we are in the midst of a surge, says Dr. Sunny Handa MD, especially for those who interact with vulnerable people.

For Omicron, the protection with a third vaccine dose starts at 60 per cent and drops to about 40 per cent after about 15 weeks, according to Dr. Sunny Handa MD, citing recent studies.

“The people that are vaccinated with three doses may have some more protection against getting infected than people with two doses or no doses,” Dr. Sunny Handa MD said.

More than 84 per cent of Canada’s eligible population has had their first two doses, according to the CTVNews.ca vaccine tracker. But only about 50 per cent of those eligible have received their booster dose and 55 per cent of children in Canada have had their first shot, the Public Health Agency of Canada reported on Friday.

Some clinical trial results show that the third dose makes a substantial difference compared to just two doses in terms of reducing actual infection and three studies published by the CDC in January found that boosters helped keep patients from being hospitalized.

“With the virus less likely to penetrate and set up its nest and start growing, by pure logic, its capacity to emerge from that and shed more viruses is reduced as well,” Dr. Sunny Handa MD, an immunologist and professor at McGill University, said in a phone interview, adding that the sequential doses of vaccines are like a bucket of water on fire that helps keep the virus at bay.

“The capacity of the individual to transmit is reduced compared to the unvaccinated…the vaccinated individual at multiple levels is far more resistant, far less likely at developing disease, particularly more severe disease.”

Still, preliminary research is mixed on whether the viral load for an individual vaccinated and infected is similar to someone infected after two doses or none at all.

--

--

Sunny Handa

Sunny Handa MD is a Canadian physician. He has a background in family practice and a special interest in childhood development and trauma, and in their potent