What Are The Odds You’ve Been Exposed To COVID And Just Didn’t Get Sick?

The omicron variant is everywhere. Here’s how well experts feel the vaccines and our immunity are working against it right now.

If you’ve been out and about during COVID waves, you might be curious if you’ve come in contact with the coronavirus. Could you be one of the lucky ones who had an asymptomatic infection? Or, is there still a good chance you haven’t encountered the virus yet?

Omicron subvariants are now dominating cases, and they spread much more rapidly than the previous variants. So if you’re going to places like restaurants or gyms with a bunch of strangers, it seems inevitable that you’ll be exposed at some point.

“It really is so transmissible that I think there’s a high chance, depending on the community transmission rate in your area — if you have substantial or high transmission rate in your area based on the CDC definitions — that you may have been exposed,” said Monica Gandhi, an infectious diseases specialist with the University of California, San Francisco.

Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said it’s crucial to differentiate between an exposure and an infection. Being exposed, or being in the presence of virus, doesn’t necessarily mean you will become infected or develop symptomatic illness (though some people, regardless of their vaccination status, definitely will).

The subvariants circulating now are so transmissible that if you’ve been out and about in an area with a lot of spread — and you weren’t wearing a mask or social distancing — there’s a solid chance you’ve been exposed, according to Gandhi. When case rates go up, so does the probability of coming into contact with the virus.

There’s a good chance a lot of us have been around the virus by now, but whether that exposure caused an infection depends on a few factors, Nuzzo said.

The first consideration is how close you were to the infected person who was shedding virus. Second is how much virus that person was putting out, as some people spread a lot more virus than others. Third is what the ventilation was like — if you were exposed in a poorly ventilated room, there’s a greater chance the virus could have gotten into your cells. The host, or how your body handles the virus, also plays a role.

Infection is different than exposure. Whether exposure leads to infection depends on many factors, including how well-ventilated the space was.
ATLANTIDE PHOTOTRAVEL VIA GETTY IMAGES/Infection is different than exposure. Whether exposure leads to infection depends on many factors, including how well-ventilated the space was.

Can you tell if you’ve been exposed?

It depends. Many vaccinated people who were exposed probably wouldn’t notice. They may have produced an immune response that successfully fought off the virus before it could cause symptomatic disease. That, after all, is the goal of the vaccines.

You might be able to sense the activation of your immune system. Upon a close exposure, your memory B cells will start rattling and producing antibodies, Gandhi explained, and your T cells will gear up to fight. Some people might be able to feel that immune response, which could potentially feel similar to some of the side effects experienced after vaccination since those were signs that your immune system was revved up.

“In the context of now, where we’re all hyperalert to symptoms, it is possible that people would feel down or tired,” Gandhi said.

Does exposure to COVID mean you’re better protected?

This one’s complicated. Some research suggests that being exposed to infectious doses of SARS-CoV-2 strengthens the immune response.

“There’s known evidence that being exposed to infection after you had a vaccine dose strengthens the immune response. It makes your memory B cells produce antibodies, it makes your T cells replicate,” Gandhi said. (Those new antibodies produced by B cells, by the way, will target the new variant it sees.)

We definitely need more data on how exposures affect our immune memory. Scientists in the United Kingdom are conducting challenge trials, in which they’re exposing young, healthy adults to the coronavirus to better understand the doses that cause infection and how different people’s immune systems respond to virus exposure.

However, this does not mean you want to become infected or get disease. There’s really no great way to predict if you’ll get sick, how sick you’ll get, or whether you’ll develop long-haul symptoms if you do get sick.

This is especially true if you’re unvaccinated with no natural immunity from previous infection. “The nice thing about being vaccinated is that you’re much less likely to get disease, but [exposure] will stimulate your immune response,” Gandhi said.

Remember: The point of the shots is to prevent severe disease, not every single infection.

“If you’re around virus in a good enough way, there’s a good chance you’re going to be infected,” Nuzzo said. The hope, she added, is that the vaccines will prevent people from becoming seriously ill. And in some cases, they’ll prevent people from having any illness whatsoever.

The growing consensus among infectious diseases specialists is that we’re all going to meet COVID at some point. Omicron and now its subvariants, being as transmissible as they are, has changed the game.

“I don’t think we’re going to eliminate it,” Gandhi said. “That, to me, means that we’re all likely to get exposed at some point.”

And if we’re going to be exposed to COVID, it’s best to do so with some immunity. Get those vaccines and boosters.

Experts are still learning about COVID-19. The information in this story is what was known or available as of publication, but guidance can change as scientists discover more about the virus. Please check the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for the most updated recommendations.

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