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Let’s answer those questions about COVID-19 vaccines

As deadlines near for COVID-19 vaccination mandates, you or someone you know may have questions about the vaccines. There’s plenty of mis-information available.  For reliable answers, local health specialists from Public Health—Seattle & King County have been answering many key questions.

We have a few of the common ones here — and many more answers on our FAQ webpage and our Fact-checking webpage.


What do we know now about how safe and effective the COVID-19 vaccines are? Has that changed now that more than 180 million people are fully vaccinated in the U.S.?

We now have more than nine months of experience with COVID-19 vaccines, and one of those vaccines (from Pfizer) has already passed all of the investigation required for final approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).  And in this time, we have learned:


If I had COVID, why should I get vaccinated? Don’t I already have immunity?

After being infected with the coronavirus, you will develop antibodies and some immune protection.  The amount of protection can vary significantly among different individuals. Experts do not yet know how long you are protected from getting sick again after recovering from COVID-19. Even if you have already recovered from COVID-19, it is possible that you could be infected with the virus that causes COVID-19 again. Recent research published by the CDC found that people who had survived COVID-19 in Kentucky and remained unvaccinated were more than twice as likely as vaccinated survivors to become reinfected. 

The bottom line: Vaccines offer a more predictable protection, and it will likely last longer. 


If I can still get infected after being vaccinated, and still be contagious, then why is there so much focus on getting everyone vaccinated?

There is a huge personal benefit from getting vaccinated: Most vaccinated people avoid serious illness, as the Delta variant of COVID-19 spreads rapidly in our community.  It helps to protect you, your friends and family, and other people in the community from COVID-19. That means you are less likely to miss work or school, to need medical care and the expense that comes with it. You are less likely to infect your family and friends.

And as a community, the only way we can get past this pandemic is to have an overwhelming majority of our residents protected from COVID-19 and taking precautions to limit its spread. 


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Originally published September 29, 2021

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