Why natural immunity against COVID-19 is not as good as vaccination, according to doctors

The U.S. has surpassed 46 million confirmed cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, and natural immunity from a prior infection may not be enough to rely on when considering the ultimate aim of reducing hospitalization and death caused by transmission — especially when it comes to mitigating the threat to the most vulnerable among us.

"The problem with natural immunity is that A) it's not as good as vaccination and B) it does wane over time and people get re-infected if you don't follow that up with a vaccination," University of Virginia Assistant Professor of Medicine Dr. Taison Bell said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above).

Other medical experts have said similar.

“This idea of really building our immunological protection at a population level just based on natural infection, first of all, is super dangerous,” Dr. Keri Althoff, associate professor of epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told Yahoo Finance. “It’s very hard. We have risk factors for people who are at higher risk for severe illness and death with this, but we have had young, healthy people die of this COVID. We don’t want this virus to just go wild and people lose their lives.”

An estimated 757,000 Americans have died from COVID-19.

Natural immunity 'ought to count too'

Many Americans who decline vaccination against COVID-19 argue that their natural immunity from prior infection should be enough to protect them and others instead of a vaccine.

Furthermore, the argument goes, populations will eventually reach a point of strong immunity against hospitalization and death from COVID-19 through a combination of vaccination and natural immunity — a concept known as endemicity.

Preventive Medicine Specialist Dr. David Katz told Yahoo Finance Live that immunity from natural COVID-19 infection “ought to count too. Those vaccinations should be freed up for others who need them more, whether it's boosters or distributions around the world.”

And Pennsylvania-based St. Luke's University Health Network announced back in September that it would allow such individuals who work for them to defer getting the COVID-19 vaccine for 12 months after their infection.

This comes after a study conducted in Israel found that natural immunity offered stronger and longer-lasting protection against the Delta strain of the coronavirus than those who hadn't been infected but were fully vaccinated.

However, according to Dr. Bell, "the nature of the virus is to come in cycles and waves. And over time when another wave comes, when that natural immunity has gone down, you have a population that's still not protected again. So I fear that's what we're going to see."