If I’ve Already Had The Coronavirus, Can I Get It Again?
The findings bode well for the COVID-19 vaccines that are being rolled out, which trigger the kind of immune responses that the studies found protective.

AP Illustration/Peter Hamlin
If I’ve already had the coronavirus, can I get it again?
It’s possible, but such cases seem to be rare.
It’s not unusual to develop some immunity to a virus after an infection, since our bodies are generally better at recognizing and fighting off bugs they’ve encountered before. And that seems to be the case with the coronavirus as well, though scientists are still trying to figure out how long any protection might last.
Some reinfections have been confirmed, but two new studies suggest that’s very unusual.
In one, only two out of 1,265 health workers in the United Kingdom who were previously infected ended up testing positive again for the coronavirus in the following six months. In another study of people in the U.S., only 0.3% of people who had been infected tested positive for the virus over the next several months – around the same rate of positivity as the U.K study.
The findings bode well for the COVID-19 vaccines that are being rolled out, which trigger the kind of immune responses that the studies found protective.
-
Biden Says His Advisers Will Lead With ‘Science And Truth’
2021-01-17 -
Teens Tutor Peers Online To Fill Need During Pandemic
2021-01-17 -
Chinese City Reports Coronavirus Found On Ice Cream
2021-01-17 -
Super Fast 5G In The US Still A Work In Progress
2021-01-17 -
The Biggest Coalition Conspiracy Theory Is Climate Change Denial
2021-01-17 -
Carbon Capture Is Vital To Meeting Climate Goals, Scientists Tell Green Critics
2021-01-17 -
Sidelining Experts, Brazil Bungled Its Immunization Plans
2021-01-16 -
WhatsApp Delays Enforcing New Privacy Policy Following Backlash
2021-01-16 -
Too Many Companies Are Banking On Carbon Capture To Reach Net Zero
2021-01-16 -
India Starts World’s Largest COVID-19 Vaccination Drive
2021-01-16