Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Montreal

COVID cases among CHSLD residents not a reflection of vaccine effectiveness, experts say

Residents at a trio of Quebec long-term care facilities have tested positive for COVID-19 despite being vaccinated. But experts warn against making judgments about the vaccine based on a handful of cases.

The immunity conferred by the vaccine isn't instantaneous, particularly in the midst of ongoing outbreaks

The Maimonides CHSLD was one of the first in Quebec to administer the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. Several residents have since contracted the disease. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

Long-term care facilities in Montreal, Quebec City and Trois-Rivireshave reported recent COVID-19 infections among residents who received the first dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

But medical experts and public health officials warn against reading too much into the situation, and say the fact some people have become sick since gettingthe vaccine is not a statement on its effectiveness.

"A vaccine doesn't provide immunity right the day you get it ... the first two weeks you're not protected," said Dr. Gaston De Serres, a medical epidemiologist at the Institut national de sant publique du Qubecand a member of the province's vaccination advisory committee. "After two weeks, then, abruptly, the disease in vaccinated individuals pretty much stops."

The number of cases also remainssmall, relative to the number of people who have been vaccinated.

The Maimonides Geriatric Centre in Montreal, for instance, reported seven COVID-19 infections among its vaccinated residents this week. It appears there have been other cases in previous weeks as well.

But witha vaccinethat clinical trials showconfers roughly 50 per cent protection two weeks after a first dose (De Serres said his reading of the data reveals a much higher degree of immunity, in the order of 90 per cent) the expected number would be much higher.

Too early for firm conclusions

Even in a situation where95per cent efficacyis reached after a second dose, simple math suggests that in a population of 270 residents which is roughly how many people have been inoculated at Maimonidesthe statistical likelihood is13 would not be protected.

As Montreal regional public health director Dr. Mylne Drouin told a news conference on Wednesday when asked about Maimonides, "it is a small number [from which] to draw a conclusion"

Similarly, the CHSLDCloutier-du Rivage in the Mauricie region has found four infections among the 154 residents who have received the vaccine.

The CHSLD Saint-Antoine in Quebec City reported 66 infections among vaccinated patients on Dec. 30, two weeks after the residenceand Maimonides became the first vaccination sites in Quebec. Though the numbers are considerably larger, it's too early for firm conclusions.

A spokesperson for the CIUSSSCapitale Nationalepointed out in a statement to CBC News the facility was in the midst of an outbreak that didn't manifest itself until a couple of days before the vaccinations began.

It's likely many residents were infected prior to receiving the vaccine. And that many others were exposed within the two-week window where protection is at its lowest ebb.

Gaston De Serres, an epidemiologist at l'Institut national de sant publique du Qubec, says the data show the COVID-19 vaccines are "really protective." (CBC News)

De Serres offered another possible explanation: during the clinical trials to establish the effectiveness of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, injections were given to subjects "who are generally younger and in better condition than people in long-term care facilities. Therefore, we may have, in this particular group of patients, a lesser protection."

That's among the many questions still outstanding as Quebec's vaccination program, which is using both the Pfizer and Moderna formulations, picks up steam.

Another is whether they will help curb asymptomatic transmission. The only certainty to this point, De Serres said, is "itprotects against becoming sick, and it protects against becoming very sick."

Experts should soon have data from the CHSLDs that establishes how sick vaccinated patients got, and when it happened.

De Serres said it's not likely the vaccination program's effect will be noticeable in terms of deaths and infections among the elderly until mid-February, roughly a month after CHSLD residents and workers have received a first dose.

There are few certainties in medicine, and no vaccine is effective in every single case. But these, he said,are pretty close.

"I think the vaccine is really protective it doesn't mean they are 100 per cent protective," said De Serres. "There are cases happening despite having one or even two doses. It's not because one is vaccinated that a person has to behave as if there is no risk."

with files from Lauren McCallum and Ben Shingler

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Your daily guide to the coronavirus outbreak. Get the latest news, tips on prevention and your coronavirus questions answered every evening.

...

The next issue of the Coronavirus Brief will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.