If I already had the coronavirus, can I get it again?

WASHINGTON (AP) – If I already had the coronavirus, can I get it again?

It is possible, but such cases seem rare.

It is not uncommon to develop a certain immunity to a virus after an infection, as our bodies are generally better at recognizing and combating the bugs they have encountered before. And this seems to be the case with coronavirus, although scientists are still trying to figure out how long a protection could last.

Some reinfections have been confirmed, but two new studies suggest it is very unusual.

In one, only two out of 1,265 workers in the UK who were previously infected became positive for coronavirus in the next six months. In another study of people in the US, only 0.3% of infected people tested positive for the virus in the next few months – about the same positivity rate as the UK study.

The findings bode well for the COVID-19 vaccines that are being released, which trigger the type of immune responses that studies have found protective.

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The AP answers the questions about coronavirus in this series. Send them to: [email protected].

Read the previous viral questions:

Can I stop wearing a mask after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine?

Can employees make COVID-19 vaccination mandatory?

Will children be able to receive COVID-19 vaccines?

What winter sports are safest to play during the pandemic?

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