Well the results came back this afternoon the local medical authorities confirmed a vaccinated couple are the likely infection source for a couple of unvaccinated people. Certainly it’s less likely than the opposite scenario, but it can and in fact did happen.
Less likely does not mean impossible, that’s a scientific fact. The fact this concept is up for debate on a GT forum of all places is part of the reason why the supposedly less learned are having such a hard time telling fact from fiction. The media and our nations experts/leaders perpetuating misleading statements has eroded the confidence of the populace in the little reliable information being disseminated.
Sad this is happening in what should be the greatest country on the face of the earth.
Yes, an infection after vaccination can happen. Reference the NC State baseball team. Or the NY Yankees organization earlier this year. No vaccination is 100% effective. But, historically, vaccinations have proven to reduce the severity of any infection if it is contracted.
I had the measles vaccine as recommended when I was a child, but still came down with the measles after returning from a trip to Italy in 7th grade back in 1985. Unlikely, yes, but it happened. And I lived through it without any medical issues. Perhaps because I had been vaccinated, but I also had excellent medical care at the time.
The bottom line is that the more people that are vaccinated against any illness, Polio, Measles, Mumps, Rubella, Flu, Covid, etc. the less likely people (vaccinated or unvaccinated) are to get it and transmit it to others.
That is the NC State Baseball team's failure. If more players had been vaccinated, there's significantly less of a chance that one or two of the unvaccinated players would get Covid and/or test positive. Therefore. the vaccinated players would have much less chance to get the virus and test positive.