Some 40 to 50 percent of people who have been infected amid Israel’s recent coronavirus surge were vaccinated against the virus, Israeli Health Ministry Director Chezy Levy has said.
“Even though the numbers are low, the fact that this is reaching vaccinated people means…that we are still checking how many vaccinated people have also been infected,” Levy said, speaking to Kan Radio.
The official added that vaccinated people who have come into contact with the Delta variant – the highly contagious but milder mutation of Covid first identified in India in April – will need to be quarantined. The World Health Organisation (WHO) says the Delta variant is now the dominant strain of the virus worldwide.
Commenting on the estimates of infection among those vaccinated, Pfizer Israel Medical Director Alon Rappaport told Army Radio that Pfizer’s vaccine has proven to be 90 percent effective in preventing symptomatic Delta variant cases, and 95 percent effective in stopping severe cases requiring hospitalisation.
The new tougher rules were introduced after authorities reported 0.6 percent positive testing among 30,000 people, with the Delta strain said to account for some 70 percent of new cases, which coronavirus czar Nachman Ash said on Friday was an indication of “an increase in infection rate.” Israel reported 803 total active cases this week, with 52 people hospitalised nationwide.
Real or Exaggerated Threat?
In a related development, newly appointed Israeli Education Minister Yifat Shasha-Biton, a former Likud lawmaker who quit the party and joined the centre-right New Hope party earlier this year, sparked a scandal this week after reportedly accusing health officials of exaggerating the danger of the new coronavirus wave.
“There are officials in the healthcare system who are deliberately spreading hysteria and intimidation,” she reportedly said in private comments leaked to Channel 12 on Thursday. The minister accused the Health Ministry of exaggerating the Delta variant’s threat to pressure parents into vaccinating children before an old batch of vaccine doses expires in July.
Chezy Levy called Shasha-Biton’s comments “unfortunate” and said she does not “own” the country's education system.