Herd immunity is not all or nothing

America is a big place

Michael Greiner
6 min readJun 4, 2021
Photo by Steven Cornfield on Unsplash

President Biden has set an ambitious goal for his covid vaccination program: a 70 percent vaccination rate among all Americans by the Fourth of July. This vision statement is Biden’s latest after his administration has smashed all the prior goals it has set for itself. Talk about underpromising and overdelivering!

The reason Biden has chosen 70 percent as his goal appears to be that this is the arbitrary number epidemiologists have proposed at which we will achieve “herd immunity.” This goal can be achieved through people surviving an infection, thus generating natural immunity to the virus, or through vaccination. Given the mortality rate of covid, achieving this goal through vaccination is far preferable to the alternative.

The theory is that viruses only thrive when they have a universe of succeptible hosts available. In other words, to survive, the virus must have people available who are not immune to the virus infecting each other. There are two routes to achieve that goal. Either stop people from infecting each other by stopping their contact, the approach we took earlier that had a devastating personal, social and economic impact upon Americans; or by making enough people immune that to the virus that it has noone to infect. That’s “herd immunity.” We’re the herd, and the goal is to get…

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Michael Greiner

Mike is an Assistant Professor of Management for Legal and Ethical Studies at Oakland U. Mike combines his scholarship with practical experience in politics.