M.H wrote: Sat Aug 07, 2021 5:43 pm
I'm currently unjabbed and quietly reticent to do so. I haven't heard a clear and convincing reason why anyone under the age of 50 w/out underlying health conditions (esp linked to respiratory issues) would seriously benefit. My understanding is that the vaccine minimises your personal risk of the virus causing you serious problems (but being young and healthy-ish does that too), but has a limited effect on reducing transmission rates (you'll be less likely to be coughing and spreading the virus, but if you have a mild or asymptomatic case then it makes little difference). So you can have both jabs, catch the virus and spread it unknowingly. If you want to minimise the risk the virus poses to you, cool. But that's as far as it goes.
There are a few misconceptions here. The first is that while the vaccines are not a guarantee against the delta variant, most studies show an 80 - 90% effectiveness. That means a vaccinated person is more likely to never get it at all. Of that remaining 10-20% there's a great chance of being asymptomatic, a fair chance of getting mildly sick and a small chance of getting bed ridden with flu-like symptoms.
The ability of the virus to spread from infected vaccinated people seems to still be an unsettled topic. The initial data indicates that a vaccinated person's body carries the same viral load (which one would infer means an identical level of contagiousness), but from what little data we have seems to still spread less.
What this amounts to is that being vaccinated is verifiably beneficial to you individually, and to public health as a whole. There seems to be a popular fallacious thought amongst the anti-vaxers, or the vaccine skeptical that since being vaccinated isn't proving to be a 100% guarantee against infection or spread, then it's not good at all. Fortunately in addition to being vaccinated, we can also wear masks. If we had a greater percentage of the population doing these things in tandem it would reduce spread and deaths significantly.