Healthcare worker gets Covid twice in twenty days
It's thought to be the shortest time between two infections since the pandemic began.
A healthcare worker has been infected with Covid-19 twice in the space of 20 days, which is believed to be the shortest time between infections since the pandemic began.
The 31-year-old woman from Spain became infected with the Delta variant followed by the Omicron variant of the virus in under three weeks.
Researchers said the case shows that even vaccinated people who have had Covid-19 "cannot assume they are protected against reinfection".
Infected 12 days after Covid booster vaccine
The woman, who has been kept anonymous, became infected in December 2021, 12 days after she received her Covid booster vaccine.
The first positive result was picked up through routine healthcare testing.
She had no symptoms and went into isolation for 10 days.
But just days after returning to work in January she began to show symptoms of Covid-19; a cough and fever as well as feeling generally unwell, she then took a test which yielded a positive result.
Lab tests showed that she was initially infected by the Delta variant of the virus, and then by the Omicron variant.
Work by the Office for National Statistics suggests the risk of reinfection is 10 times higher with the Omicron variant compared with the Delta variant.
Omicron is now the dominant variant in most of the world.
People who had Covid-19 cannot assume they are protected against reinfection
The healthcare worker's case is currently being presented to the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases in Portugal.
Dr Gemma Recio, of the Institut Catala de la Salut in Spain, one of the study's authors, said: "This case highlights the potential of the Omicron variant to evade the previous immunity acquired either from a natural infection with other variants or from vaccines."
"In other words, people who have had Covid-19 cannot assume they are protected against reinfection, even if they have been fully vaccinated.”
"Nevertheless, both previous infection with other variants and vaccination do seem to partially protect against severe disease and hospitalisation in those with Omicron.”
"This case also underscores the need to carry out genomic surveillance of viruses in infections in those who are fully vaccinated and in reinfections.”
"Such monitoring will help detect variants with the ability to partially evade the immune response."