Ditching distancing could risk vaccine-resistant virus strains

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Credit: GoToVan, Flickr - social distancing signs - https://www.flickr.com/photos/gotovan/49684963711
Credit: GoToVan, Flickr - social distancing signs - https://www.flickr.com/photos/gotovan/49684963711

Keeping social distancing in place while vaccination is underway could help prevent new vaccine-resistant strains of the COVID-19 virus, suggests a modelling study. Mathematical biologists used real-world data from six countries (Israel, USA, UK, Brazil, France and Germany), forecasting that when vaccine uptake is fast, as seen in Israel, resistant strains can be prevented by social distancing until vaccination is widespread. The authors recommend social distancing or contact-reducing measures, such as working from home, together with fast mass vaccination, until daily infections drop dramatically.

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From: Springer Nature

Maintaining social distancing policies as vaccines are being rolled out may prevent the evolution of vaccine-resistant strains of SARS-CoV-2, suggests a mathematical biology study published in Nature Human Behaviour.

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, focus has been placed on worldwide vaccination, with the hope that social and economic activities — and the relaxation of associated social distancing measures — can gradually resume as a result of vaccine uptake. Recently, however, partially vaccine-resistant variants of SARS-CoV-2 (such as Delta and Omicron) have emerged, causing large outbreaks of disease.

Using vaccination and infection data from six countries (Israel, USA, UK, Brazil, France and Germany), Yitzhak Pilpel and colleagues studied the evolution of SARS-CoV-2 in response to vaccination rates and social distancing measures, such as lockdowns. The authors reveal that when vaccination rates are slow, resistant strains are likely to emerge even if lockdown policies are maintained. However, if vaccine uptake is fast — as seen in Israel — the study predicts that resistance can be prevented if social distancing measures are maintained until most people are vaccinated. As such, limiting the number of new infections through contact reduction during mass vaccination programmes is crucial to prevent the evolution of vaccine-resistant variants of SARS-CoV-2.

These findings highlight that to prevent the evolution of vaccine-resistant variants, social distancing is necessary until herd immunity is achieved. The authors recommend that policy-makers encourage social distancing or contact reducing measures — such as lockdowns or guidance on homeworking — together with fast mass vaccination.

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conference:
Nature Human Behaviour
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel), Tel Aviv University (Israel), Max-Planck-Institute for Evolutionary Biology (Germany), Harvard University (USA).
Funder: We thank the Minerva Foundation for funding the Minerva Center for Live Emulation of Evolution in the Lab (Y.P.). Y.P. is a Kimmel Investigator and holds the Ben May Professorial Chair. The authors declare no competing interests.
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