
Adults age 65+ more at risk for catching covid again
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:

Adults age 65 and older who have been infected with the coronavirus are more likely than younger people to be reinfected, a large-scale study published in _The Lancet_ reveals. The study,
which looked at reinfection rates among approximately 4 million people in Denmark, found that the vast majority of those who had tested positive for the coronavirus were protected from the
virus for at least six months, and that reinfection was rare. However, adults ages 65 and older who had been previously infected had only about 47.1 percent protection against a repeat
infection, compared to a protection rate of 80.5 percent among younger people, the study showed. The difference can likely be explained by natural changes that weaken your immune system as
you age, the study's authors said. "We know that as we get older, the robustness of our immune systems wanes,” explains C. Buddy Creech, M.D., an infectious disease specialist and
director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Research Program in Nashville, Tennessee. “It's the reason why we give older adults shingles boosters and high-dose influenza vaccine, or influenza
vaccine that has a special immune stimulant in it called an adjuvant." NATURAL IMMUNITY IS NOT ENOUGH The study underscores the importance of face masks, social distancing and getting
the COVID-19 vaccine, even for those who have already had the coronavirus, especially if they're older. “Natural protection, especially among older people, cannot be relied on,” the
study's authors wrote. The coronavirus vaccines that have been authorized in the U.S. offer significantly better protection than natural immunity, Creech says. “If you take 100
individuals who have all had COVID, their immune response might be all over the map,” he says. “It often correlates with a variety of factors, including severity of their initial disease.
But when you look at immune response [to the vaccines], they are far stronger and more consistent.” In a piece of good news, the study found “no evidence” that a person's immunity
declines within a six-month period of testing positive for the virus. The authors noted that their study analyzed coronavirus test data from spring and fall 2020, before the identification
and emergence of new, more contagious strains of the virus called variants. Some of the most concerning variants contain a mutation that may allow the virus to elude some of the antibodies
produced through natural immunity or the current vaccines. "These data are all confirmation, if it were needed, that for SARS-CoV-2, the hope of protective immunity through natural
infections might not be within our reach, and a global vaccination programme with high efficacy vaccines is the enduring solution,” _The Lancet_ said in a commentary released with the study.
_Michelle Crouch is a contributing writer who has covered health and personal finance for some of the nation's top consumer publications. Her work has appeared in _Reader's
Digest, Real Simple, Prevention, The Washington Post_ and _The New York Times_._