Submitted by pewpewhadouken t3_zenrlj in askscience
sorry for the long post - i’ve just been offered my 4th booster (which i will take) - but was curious if the mrna vaccines i took in the past still be in “memory” for my immune system? would someone with all previous vaccines be in a better situation than someone who just got the most recent?
friend claims the previous vaccines no longer amount to anything and that the virus is essentially not a big threat - his proof being federal governments are allowing unvaccinated people back into work.
Em_Adespoton t1_iz88n1b wrote
SARS-COV-19 is no longer a threat to the government— for the most part hospitals can now handle the constant stream of COVID cases (although in combination with the record flu and RSV numbers, the combination may cause issues over December).
This says nothing about risk to an individual.
As for the variants, keeping boosted means your immune system is keeping on the alert for COVID type infections. The latest strain may have mutated past where the bivalent booster will recognize it, but your immune system is still on high alert AND you’re still mostly protected against the older strains, which still exist.
But over December, you’re probably best served by wearing a mask in public (to protect others), keep a reasonable distance from others, wash your hands regularly, and stop touching your face.