Julia Reich
Mr. Ippolito
AP Biology C even
4/8/21
Link to article:
Saey, Tina Hesman. “Moderna and Pfizer COVID-19 Vaccines May Reduce Coronavirus
Transmission.” Science News, 30 Mar. 2021, www.sciencenews.org/article/coronavirus-covid-vaccine-moderna-pfizer-transmission-disease.
Tina Hesman Saey covers the U.S used vaccines against COVID-19 and their ability to block infection as well as disease. Millions of people are terrified of the potential for a fourth surge in the U.S due to variants and lifting of mask/social distancing mandates. However, Jeff Burgess, associate dean for research at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health at the University of Arizona in Tucson has recently proven that they, “‘clearly showed in our study that if you were at least 14 days out from your first shot, you had 80 percent protection’ from infection.”’ Their study concentrates on the evidence which suggests that vaccines may not only just reduce the risk of getting seriously ill, but also can prevent catching the virus initially. ‘““If you can’t get infected, you can’t infect anyone else, which means the vaccines can reduce transmission as well as the disease,’ says Marm Kilpatrick, an infectious diseases researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not involved in the study.” According to a Texas report, 234 of 8.969 (2.61%) unvaccinated employees tested positive from December 15 to January 28. For those with one shot, the numbers were 112 of 6,144 (1.82%). For fully vaccinated employees, there was a 0.05% of those who tested positive (4 of 8,121). These are data which begin to prove that vaccines are working, and the nation needs younger people to sign up as soon as possible. Vaccines, social distancing, and masks are the keys to getting through this pandemic.
I chose to read this article as the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines are highly spoken about today. The vaccines (globally as well) are all so new and testing may not be 100% accurate, which may cause doubt in people. However, the data shown in Saey’s article begins to prove that the vaccines are nearly 100% effective. Even if you do contract the virus, the likelihood that you will end up in the hospital is low, and that is what the vaccine’s goal is. It works similarly to the flu vaccine, and I think that is a detail many people are not aware of. Hopefully Saey’s article will convince those who are unsure of the vaccines to sign up.
Saey’s article had many strengths, one including the fact that she added a lot of data from numerous sources. She included studies from Arizona, California, Texas, and more. This includes a variety of numbers and locations. Secondly, her article is well written and very easy to read and understand. This makes the information accessible to all audiences. I don’t think she had many weaknesses in this article, except that it was highly opinionated. This was not an issue for me (as I agree with her), but others may feel less inclined to read and understand. To improve this, she would simply take out a few paragraphs that have subjective comments. Overall, I loved learning about the subject and reading her article.