"COVID-19 vaccine 한번만 접종해도 변이(variants)바이러스에 강한 면역이 생겨 전염 방지된다는 "연구결과가 보고되여 희망을 주고있다. 우리도 국민들 모두가 급한데로 단 한번만이라도 접종을 다마쳤으면 하는 바램이다.
이러한 희망적인 연구결과발표와는 반대로 지금 우리나라는 확진자가 급증하여 어제는 6개월만에 다시 1000명이 넘는 확진환자가 발생했다고 하는 비참한 뉴스가 보도되는 그시간에 문재인은 이제 대한민국이 개발도상국가에서 선진국으로 진입했다고 자화자찬을 늘어 놓는 짖거리를 보면서, 저양반 대한민국 대통령맞아?라는 질문을 던지지 않을수 없었다.
https://www.chosun.com/national/national_general/2021/07/06/F6V54D4MNZDPLKTJIA4QSGGADQ/
온타리오주의 COVID-19 에 대한 면역연구 발표에 따르면, 캐나다에서 승인된 백신을 단 한번만 접종 했어도 변이바이러스 전염으로 인한 통증, 병원후송 또는 사망이 현저히 줄어 들었음을 확인한 보고서가 발표됐다.
지난 토요일 미리 프린트하여 보고된 연구결과에 따르면(pre-print study published on Saturday), Pfizer, Moderna 또는AstraZeneca 백신을 단한번 접종했어도, 캐나다 온타리오에서 확인된 4가지의 변히 바이러스에 면역효과는 48-83%를 나타냈으며, 이번 실험조사는 지난 겨울과 이번 봄철에 연구한 결과에서 나온 수치다.
캐나다 방역당국은 지난 3월부터 첫번째 접종을 가능한 많이 시키는 전략을 세워, 두번째 접종 기간을 16주 까지 연장하면서 일차 접종을 강행 했는데, 그이유는 백신 공급이 제한되는 경우를 생각해서 1차 접종을 가능하면 많이하면 전염확율을 줄일수 있을것이라는 믿음을 갖고 접종실시를 밀어 부치는것이, 백신부족으로 2차 접종이 계획보다 제한이 되여 오히려 더 적은 숫자의 사람들이 접종을 하게 될수도 있다는 우려를 염려 해서 추진 했던 것이다.
이번 연구는 오타와 대학과 Clinical and Evaluative Sciences연구소에서 참가한 과학자들이 합동으로 작성하여 보고된 것이다.
이번연구결과는 온타리오 주민이 COVID-19에 전염됐었거나 또는 COVID-19 vaccine을 지난해 12월부터 금년도(2012) 5월 말까지 사이에 접종, 또는 두가지 다 경험한 주민 420,000을 대상으로 실시 연구한 결과였다.
대한민국의 방역당국이 이연구 결과를 참고하여, 2차 접종도 중요하지만, 우선적으로 1차 접종을 국민 모두가 할수 있도록 조치하는게, 다시 1000명이 넘는 확진자들의 발생을 줄일수 있을 것이라는 생각이 들어서다.
정세균부터 시작해서 K방역 잘했다고 떠들어 댔던 관계자들은 분발하여, 우선 확진자 발생을 줄이는데 주력하는 뜻에서 1차 접종을 모두에게 실시하고, 그다음에 공,과를 따지는게 순서 아닐까.
Last Updated Monday, July 5, 2021 12:08PM EDT
A new study of Ontario COVID-19 data finds all vaccines approved for use in Canada are doing better than first expected at preventing symptomatic infection, hospitalization or death from coronavirus variants of concern, even after just one dose.
The pre-print study published on Saturday shows one dose of the Pfizer, Moderna or AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines had between a 48 to 83 per cent effectiveness against symptomatic infection by any of the four variants of concern detected in Ontario recipients this past winter in spring.
Each of the vaccines also had a 78 to 96 per cent efficacy against preventing hospitalization or death from infection by a variant of concern, two weeks after a first dose.
“Our real-world vaccine effectiveness estimates suggest that even a single dose of these three vaccine products provide good to excellent protection against symptomatic infection and severe outcomes caused by the four currently circulating (variants of concern), and that two doses are likely to provide even higher protection,” Scientists at Public Health Ontario, University of Toronto and several hospitals wrote.
The P.1 “Gamma” variant first discovered in Brazil showed the greatest ability to neutralize the positive effects of all vaccines studied.
Of more than 3,000 people infected with P.1 during the study period, a first dose of AstraZeneca showed only 48 per cent efficacy at preventing infection, while Pfizer was 60 per cent effective and Moderna was 77 per cent effective.
The study found just 0.4 per cent (26 people) of those who received two doses of Pfizer became infected with a B.1.1.7 Alpha variant case requiring hospitalization one week after their second dose.
For Moderna, it was 0.2 per cent who required intense intervention with B.1.1.7 one week or more after their second dose, and for AstraZeneca it was less than 0.1 per cent.
A parallel ongoing survey by Public Health Ontario found only 0.15 per cent of partially vaccinated people developed a symptomatic case of COVID-19 during the same period, and only 0.02 per cent of fully vaccinated people developed a detectable case.
For the Delta B.1.617+ variants of concern, the study’s authors had to rely on much smaller and less reliable sample sizes, as Delta cases are only confirmed through whole genomic sequencing which is too expensive and laborious to apply to all positive cases.
Even so, they found first shots of Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca were 57, 72 and 67 per cent effective respectively in preventing symptomatic infection from Delta, roughly in line with studies conducted in the UK and B.C.
One week after a second dose, they found Pfizer was 87 per cent effective at preventing Delta infection, but there were not enough Moderna or AstraZeneca recipients to calculate efficacy.
Across all four variants of concern, the three vaccines showed strong efficacy in preventing symptomatic infection one week after dose 2, ranging from 92 per cent for Moderna against the Alpha variant to 87 per cent for Pfizer against the Delta variant.
The study used data generated by more than 420,000 people who were either infected with COVID-19 in Ontario or received a COVID-19 vaccine, or both, between December 2020 and the end of May 2021.
Of those, more than 40,000 tested positive for a variant of concern during the study period.
A previous letter published in the New England Journal of Medicine by researchers in Qatar found far lower rates of efficacy for Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines against the “Alpha” B.1.1.7 variant, but used data involving people infected sometimes only days after receiving a first dose.
Canadian officials embarked on a strategy in March of giving out as many first doses as possible, extending the interval between doses up to 16 weeks in the belief that more partially vaccinated people would suppress transmission better than fewer fully vaccinated people in the context of restricted vaccine supply.
Also contributing to the study were authors from the Institute for Clinical and Evaluative Sciences and The University of Ottawa.
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