I agree that this seems to explain it, but it raises a new question: how did the antibody rate get so high? Is it possible that part of Delta’s contagiousness is that it has a lot more carriers who don’t get sick?
I actually don’t think the high level of antibodies should be such a surprise. I updated my original comment to clarify, but much of that is from vaccination, not from natural infection. Between high rates of vaccination plus historical infections, it’s not surprising to me that such a high fraction of adults in the UK have antibodies.
I think I agree. I hadn’t realized the UK vaccination rates were so high. In that case I’ll lean towards the pockets of unvaccinated reaching herd immunity + shorter incubation period hypothesis.
I agree that this seems to explain it, but it raises a new question: how did the antibody rate get so high? Is it possible that part of Delta’s contagiousness is that it has a lot more carriers who don’t get sick?
I actually don’t think the high level of antibodies should be such a surprise. I updated my original comment to clarify, but much of that is from vaccination, not from natural infection. Between high rates of vaccination plus historical infections, it’s not surprising to me that such a high fraction of adults in the UK have antibodies.
I think I agree. I hadn’t realized the UK vaccination rates were so high. In that case I’ll lean towards the pockets of unvaccinated reaching herd immunity + shorter incubation period hypothesis.