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Omicron infection didn’t protect some seniors from getting COVID-19 again: study

Click to play video: 'Seniors with omicron more susceptible to COVID-19 re-infection: study'
Seniors with omicron more susceptible to COVID-19 re-infection: study
WATCH: Researchers have found that seniors who caught COVID-19 during the first wave of the omicron variant between December 2021 and March 2022 did not have strengthened immunity come the second wave. Global's Katherine Ward reports – Aug 21, 2023

A new study has found that previous infection with an Omicron variant of COVID-19 did not protect seniors in long-term care and retirement homes from getting reinfected within a few months.

Senior author and McMaster University immunologist Dawn Bowdish says the study results are surprising because they challenge the current thinking about hybrid immunity.

People are expected to gain hybrid immunity to COVID-19 when they’ve been both vaccinated against the virus and have also been infected.

But in the McMaster study, vaccinated seniors who had been infected with Omicron variants in early 2022 were about 20 times more likely to be reinfected with another Omicron variant later that year.

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That’s compared to seniors who were vaccinated but had not been infected.

Click to play video: 'COVID-19 reinfection risk, even if you’re fully vaccinated'
COVID-19 reinfection risk, even if you’re fully vaccinated

Bowdish says the study suggests people should stay up-to-date with their COVID-19 vaccinations and not assume a previous infection is protecting them.

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But Bowdish also says it’s not known whether or not the study results apply to the general population or if they are specific to seniors.

The study followed 750 vaccinated seniors in long-term care and retirement homes across Ontario.

It was published Monday in eClinicalMedicine, one of The Lancet’s medical journals.

The study shows that a lot is still unknown about how the virus that causes COVID-19 infects people, said Bowdish.

“(Canada’s) vaccination strategy is predicated on this assumption that having had a recent infection will protect you from an infection at least for a short period of time. And our study shows that for some variants that’s just not true in some people,” said Bowdish, who holds the Canada Research Chair in Aging and Immunity at McMaster University.

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