Most people who had COVID-19 are protected from catching it again for at least six months, but elderly patients are more prone to reinfection, according to research published in The Lancet. The large-scale assessment of reinfection rates in Denmark in 2020 confirms that only a small proportion of people (0.65 percent) returned a positive PCR test twice.
However, while prior infection gave those under the age of 65 years around 80 percent protection against reinfection, for people aged 65 and above it conferred only 47 percent protection, indicating that they are more likely to catch COVID-19 again." Our study confirms what a number of others appeared to suggest: reinfection with COVID-19 is rare in younger, healthy people, but the elderly are at greater risk of catching it again," said researcher Steen Ethelberg from the Statens Serum Institut, Denmark.
For the study, the researchers analyzed data collected as part of Denmark's national COVID-19 testing strategy, through which more than two-thirds of the population (69 percent, 4 million people) were tested in 2020. Researchers used this data, spanning the country's first and second waves, to estimate protection against repeat infection with the original COVID-19 strain.