Exploring what the 'NOVIDs' can teach us (2024)

By Bonnie Petrie

PublishedApril 26, 2024 at 2:00 PM CDT

It’s been more than four years since COVID-19 changed our lives, and scientists are still trying to figure out why this novel coronavirus makes some people so sick, and others never get it.

Take Geoffrey Bar Lev. He’s a social guy.

“I like to go dancing. I like to be with people. That's what I like,” said Bar Lev, who is 76.

That is how he hoped to spend his retirement. Then the pandemic happened. At his age, he was at high risk for severe disease or death if he became infected, so his social life stopped cold.

“I got accustomed to being alone. To not go out to eat often or not go to clubs and not go dancing. I got used to it,” he said. “Half of my living room, I turned into a gym. So I worked out a lot, and that's what kept me sane — working out.”

He followed guidance from the CDC. He got vaccinated. He got the boosters. He was careful about his nutrition. He took vitamins and added zinc, every day.

“I just didn't get it,” Bar Lev said.

He never got COVID-19.

“Almost everybody I know, everybody that I know has had it at least once,” Bar Lev said. “I suppose I was lucky because a lot of people had COVID here. A lot of people died because there were lots of anti-vaxxers here, and lots of people that didn't like wearing masks.”

“I thought that it was very serious,” he added.

Bar Lev is one of a small group of individuals known as NOVIDs.

“So, a NOVID is simply someone who has not had COVID,” according to Dr. Jan Patterson, a professor and infectious disease physician at UT Health San Antonio. She’s also an author and co-investigator at the San Antonio site of the RECOVER Initiative, a National Institutes of Health study with a mission to understand, treat, and prevent Long COVID.

“Of course, somebody who hasn't had it at all — that would usually be somebody who's had less exposure. Somebody who's not public facing, who doesn't have young children, you know, because young children, you know, tend to pass things around and they're often in little groups with other young children.”

A NOVID probably worked from home, and, like Bar Lev, generally avoided people.

Others may have had COVID and just don’t know it. Those are the people in which Jill Hollenbach is interested: People who’ve had COVID but never had a single symptom.

“We were really stringent in how we selected people. And so, we only included people that had no symptoms whatsoever,” she said.

Hollenbach is an epidemiology and biostatistics researcher at UCSF, and her lab has found a gene variant that appears to protect people … not from infection, but from symptoms.

It’s a variant of an immune system gene, HLA-B. HLA-B sits on the surface of all of our cells, looking for invaders. When it sees a virus, it snatches up a piece and holds it up so some of our fighter immune cells — T cells — can see it. Since the COVID virus was novel, the viral chunk would be unfamiliar to our T cells, so they wouldn’t do anything.

But in the people with this specific HLA gene variant, HLA-B*15:01, the t cells responded immediately … like they had seen the COVID virus before, even though that was impossible.

“We know that there is a lot of similarity between parts of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and common cold coronaviruses,” she said. “What we think is going on in this case is that it's just a very kind of happy accident that the way this piece looks when it's being held up to the T cells by [the HLA variant] B*15 is just really similar to how the common cold virus looks.”

The T cells thought the novel coronavirus was an old coronavirus they’d fought before. They thought it was a familiar enemy and fought it as such.

“And so, what we think is that very early in infection, these T cells get woken up, fired up, become activated and clear the infection before the person ever experiences any symptoms,” Hollenbach explained.

“So these people in some ways were vaccinated against COVID by virtue of having, you know, had a common cold virus earlier in their lives,” she added.

It’s important to learn why people like Bar Lev are NOVIDs — or became infected but never got sick — because a better understanding of our immune response to this virus could help us more efficiently fight the next virus … or fungus, or bacteria. That might reduce the need for distance and isolation. Bar Lev hopes that never has to happen again.

“It really cuts into a person's life,” he mused. “A long way. It really cuts deep. It's just a difficult, lonely existence.”

In the meantime, Bar Lev remains COVID cautious, generally avoiding large crowds and keeping up to date on his vaccines. It may be a lonely existence, but he still doesn’t know how he’d respond to COVID if he became infected. Would he become very sick? Would he die? That’s not a risk he’s willing to take.

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Exploring what the 'NOVIDs' can teach us (2024)

FAQs

What has COVID taught us? ›

The pandemic not only brought to light the large gaps we have within the health care system and disaster preparedness in our nation, it also put a magnifying glass on the health inequities that underserved communities have been facing for decades.

What percent of people have never had COVID? ›

Nearly 1 in 4 U.S. adults and older teens had still not caught COVID-19 by the end of last year, according to new estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, while 77.5% had antibodies from at least one prior infection.

What does it mean if you never got COVID? ›

But earlier in the pandemic, there was a study that was done where they looked at something called HLA, which is the human leukocyte antigen, which signals the immune system. They found that some people who had a mutation in the genes coding for HLA seemed to be less likely to have symptomatic infection.

What has COVID-19 taught us about infectious diseases? ›

One of the most important lessons learned from COVID-19 is that if pandemic control is to be affected, its effectiveness rests on a rapid and coordinated response at the local, national, and international levels.

How has COVID impacted teaching? ›

Eight broad themes emerged from the coding process: (1) Difficulties Acclimating to New Teaching Demands, (2) Personal Concerns, (3) Teaching Is A Relationship, (4) School as a Place of Community, (5) Self-Reflection About Teaching Identity, (6) Communication Between Administration and Teachers, (7) Difficulty ...

What is COVID-19 biggest impact? ›

The crisis had a dramatic impact on global poverty and inequality. Global poverty increased for the first time in a generation, and disproportionate income losses among disadvantaged populations led to a dramatic rise in inequality within and across countries.

Is COVID still a pandemic? ›

While the WHO stopped short of determining whether or not COVID-19 still constitutes a pandemic, the agency made it clear the virus “remains a global health threat.”

Is anyone immune to COVID-19? ›

Many health care workers and others have never contracted the disease despite being heavily exposed. Scientists around the world are studying whether genetic mutations make some people immune to the infection or resistant to the illness.

How long does COVID immunity last? ›

Evidence suggests immunity following infection should generally last six months in healthy adults and can be prolonged with vaccination. But there are exceptions, and all of this assumes the virus has not mutated so much that it 'escapes' our immune response.

Does COVID damage the immune system? ›

In a small study supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), severe cases of COVID-19 were shown to cause long-lasting changes to the immune system. Researchers found that severe cases of COVID-19 can change which genes are turned on or off in certain stem cells.

Is anyone immune in The Walking Dead? ›

In the original show and in its five spinoff series, there has never been a character that is immune to the zombie virus. That fact alone makes Laurent special, and also, makes The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon special. Furthermore, Laurent's immunity changes the course of The Walking Dead's overarching story.

How many times can you catch COVID? ›

You can be reinfected multiple times. Reinfections are most often mild, but severe illness can occur. If you are reinfected, you can also spread the virus to others.

Does COVID erases immune memory? ›

Despite the spectrum of severity of covid-19 disease, no significant differences in the function or phenotype of immune memory responses have been found after SARS-CoV-2 infection in mild or severe disease.

Is your immune system stronger after COVID? ›

The short answer is yes. Learn more about how recovering from COVID-19 makes your immune system stronger. Any time you catch a virus and recover from the illness, you retain antibodies. These antibodies help your body fight off future infections so that you either don't get sick or have milder symptoms.

What did COVID-19 teach people? ›

More stuff doesn't deliver fulfillment: Staying at home and relying on less has taught us to reexamine our priorities. Buying or taking advantage of every possible modern convenience isn't necessary for our happiness or survival.

How did COVID-19 affect the world? ›

The COVID-19 Pandemic has altered human existence's political, environmental, and economic elements, which affect psychological growth and sustainability. This impacts people's living standards and quality of life. The COVID-19 era resulted in social problems and international crises in the early 2020's (30).

What does COVID-19 explains? ›

Coronavirus, COVID-19. COVID-19 is caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. COVID-19 can cause mild to severe respiratory illness, including death. The best preventive measures include getting vaccinated, wearing a mask during times of high transmission, staying 6 feet apart, washing hands often and avoiding sick people.

What are the problems with COVID-19 in the US? ›

Over one million Americans died from COVID-19 during the pandemic. Many of these deaths were preventable and put a spotlight on health inequities, political polarization and public health underfunding that already existed in the U.S. and persist today.

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