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The Carer Digital
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THECARERUK
Issue 47
Infections Fall By 62% In Care Home Residents Five Weeks After First Jab
Coronavirus infections in care home residents fell by 62% from five weeks after they received their first vaccine dose, Government-funded research has revealed. Residents in England who were infected after having the vaccine may also be less likely to transmit the virus, according to preliminary findings from the Vivaldi study. A national study launched to research the rate of COVID-19 infections in care homes is led by Dr Laura Shallcross, and will run until November this year, in collaboration with Four Seasons healthcare and the Department of Health and Social Care. The aim of the study is to find out how many care home staff and residents have been infected with COVID-19, to inform decisions around the best approach
to COVID-19 testing in the future. Researchers tracked in excess of 10,400 care home residents in England, average age being 86, between December and March, comparing the number of infections occurring in vaccinated and unvaccinated groups using data retrieved from routine monthly polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing. The study calculated the risk of infection was 56% lower from four weeks after a single dose of either the Pfizer or Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, and 62% lower after five weeks.
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