The study, which evaluated over one million patients, is one of the first to analyze the effectiveness of the vaccine on such a large scale.

GETTING INOCULATED at a Jerusalem Clalit clinic this week (photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)
GETTING INOCULATED at a Jerusalem Clalit clinic this week (photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

 

The coronavirus vaccine prevents 57% of symptomatic cases within about two weeks after the first dose and 94% of symptomatic cases starting seven days after the second dose, according to a new study using information from the Clalit HMO, the first such study to be peer reviewed.

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday, evaluated the vaccine’s effectiveness in five areas of interest: coronavirus infections confirmed with a PCR test, symptomatic COVID-19, hospital admission for COVID-19, severe cases of COVID-19 and death due to COVID-19.

Clalit is the largest HMO in Israel, insuring 4.7 million patients, about 53% of the country’s population. The study evaluated 1,163,534 vaccinated members of the HMO.

The study, which evaluated the data of over one million patients, is one of the first to analyze the effectiveness of the vaccine on such a large scale in the “real world.” The large amount of detailed data also allowed researchers to estimate vaccine effectiveness for specific subpopulations, something that randomized clinical trials were unable to do. The efficacy of the vaccine was found to be high and similar to the efficacy reported in clinical trials.

The researchers found that during the period from 14 to 20 days after the first dose, the vaccine was 46% effective at preventing confirmed infections, 57% effective at preventing symptomatic cases of COVID-19, 74% effective at preventing hospitalization, 62% effective at preventing severe illness and 72% effective at preventing deaths due to the virus.

In the period from 21 days to 27 days after the first dose, the effectiveness of the vaccine increased, becoming 60% effective at preventing confirmed infections, 66% effective at preventing symptomatic cases of COVID-19, 78% effective at preventing hospitalization, 80% effective at preventing severe illness and 84% effective at preventing deaths due to the virus.

Starting seven days after the second dose, the effectiveness of the vaccine improved significantly, preventing 92% of confirmed infections, 94% of symptomatic cases, 87% of hospitalizations and 92% of severe cases. The study did not determine the effective of the second dose in preventing deaths due to the virus.

The efficacy presented by the Clalit study concerning hospitalization, serious disease and death is lower than the efficacy presented by the Health Ministry earlier this week, which reported that the vaccine was 99% effective at preventing this issues. The Health Ministry additionally found that the vaccine was 91.8% effective in preventing individuals from contracting the virus, 96.9% from developing symptoms such as fever and respiratory difficulties.

As reported by The Jerusalem Post