Medical experts have termed such instances 'breakthrough cases' whereby a fully vaccinated person gets the disease they are vaccinated for
There have been quite a few
reports lately about people testing COVID-19 positive
even after vaccination.
In March, Punjab reported eight such
cases where one tested positive after the first
dose of the vaccine. A Gujarat
health official tested positive for the virus
even after the second dose of the vaccine. Similar incidents were recorded in
Pune, where two doctors
tested positive even after the second dose.
Can you test positive after the COVID vaccine?
World Health Organization (WHO)
mentions on its website that the vaccine would not cause a positive test result
for PCR or antigen test. “This is because the tests check for active disease
and not whether an individual is immune or not,” it states.
In the case of an antibody test,
however, it may be possible to test positive. The serology test measures a
person’s COVID-19 immunity. Since the vaccine prompts an immune response, so
some antibody tests might show the result as positive, mentions the
international public health agency.
Can you get infected after getting COVID vaccine?
Medical experts have termed such
instances “breakthrough cases” whereby a fully vaccinated person gets the
disease they are vaccinated for.
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), which is currently researching the effectiveness of the
COVID-19 vaccine, says there are multiple factors that affect how a vaccine
works “in real-world conditions”. These include:
*Host factors such as people not
included in clinical trials who may respond differently to the vaccine
*Virus factors such as variants
*Programmatic factors such as
following dosing schedules or storing and handling vaccines properly
Besides, no vaccine in the world
has been deemed disease-proof, Dr Rajesh Gupta, additional director,
pulmonology and critical care, Fortis Hospital Noida, tells indianexpress.com.
He says, “Immunity kicking in
depends on a number of things. Remember that no vaccine allows for 100 percent
immunity. There is something called the window period which is the time between
when the vaccine is given and when it comes into effect and immunity kicks in.
During the window period, you might get infected.”
In the case of coronavirus, the
window period is about two weeks after getting the second dose of the vaccine,
said the doctor. “What you also need to remember is that all vaccines do not
cover all the strains and the new strains may keep appearing. Therefore there
might be a small percentage of people who get infected but they will have the
mild or moderate form of the disease.”
Dr Gupta also cautioned that people should not stop taking precautions even after being vaccinated. “The virus is affecting those people who think that just because they have been vaccinated they do not need to follow COVID precautions like hand hygiene, sanitisation and social distancing. So it is important that this is still followed even after getting vaccinated.”
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