Which, again, is information we at this point have for only a limited length of time
Yes, but it's about the stretch of time (where the titres fall below the "working" levels) that vaccine-induced immunity, in most cases, still has to
get to, thus improving the forecast.
And I thought vaccination was supposed to provide better immunity than infection; so, if it's different in that way, do we know that it's the same in this way?
Not sure I read that line correctly ... yes, vaccine-induced immunity is reportedly better in
several aspects than one acquired through actual infection¹. How "good" the immunity is (and how long it'll probably last) is effectively measured in the form of the titre levels². Also, by that time, the actual vaccines - or, in the case of infection-acquired immunity, virtually all free-ranging viruses - have
vanished from the body, so in any case, it's our same ol' immune system that's producing the antibodies, and slowly
lowering the production rate over time. I suppose one
can theorize that some heretofore unknown mechanism might cause that "unlearning" process to suddenly differ between post-vaxx and post-haxx cases, but it doesn't seem very
likely to me ...
¹ And I'm not even talking about vaccination skipping the whole "being ill for days, weeks, months,
or worse" or "risk of developing 'Long CoViD'" aspects here.
² That's still simplified, of course. The various vaccines each train one of a handful
different parts of the entire immune system, which is one reason that experts think that
combos of the vaccines available now might actually work even better than the current "pick one and stick to it", while an actual infection triggers
all applicable ones, of course. At a
price.