KEY POINTS
  • Preliminary findings in Public Health England's SIREN study found antibodies from past Covid infection provide 83% protection against reinfection.
  • However, the early evidence also suggests a small number of people with antibodies may still be able to carry and transmit the virus.
Patients arrive in ambulances at the Royal London Hospital, on January 05, 2021 in London, England. The British Prime Minister made a national television address on Monday evening announcing England is to enter its third lockdown of the covid-19 pandemic. This week the UK recorded more than 50,000 new confirmed Covid cases for the seventh day in a row.

LONDON — People who have been infected with Covid are likely to have some form of immunity for at least five months, according to early results of a major new study in the U.K.

The preliminary findings in Public Health England's SIREN study — which has surveyed thousands of U.K. health-care workers in a bid to establish whether prior infection protects against future infection — found antibodies provide an 83% rate of protection against reinfection, compared with people who have not had the disease before.