China Daily (Hong Kong)

Omicron not ‘big flu’; it ‘can bite’, expert says

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The fast-spreading Omicron variant should not be treated like influenza, because it can pose severe risks to unvaccinat­ed people and its long-term effects on recovered patients still remain unclear, health experts said.

As the new strain has swept the world and caused several outbreaks in China, Chinese experts have called for accelerate­d efforts to expand vaccinatio­n and resolutely adhere to the country’s sciencebas­ed virus control strategy.

“Omicron is not a ‘big flu’, and it can bite, especially for people without strong immunity,” Zhang Wenhong, leader of the COVID-19 treatment expert team of Shanghai and head of Fudan University Huashan Hospital’s infectious disease department, said at a science forum in Shanghai last week.

He said that successful­ly fending off the threat of Omicron requires building robust herd immunity and preparing sufficient medical resources.

Some Western countries, despite a significan­t increase in daily new infections, have managed to lower their COVID-19 death rates because of high vaccinatio­n coverage, according to Zhang.

“We should further expand initial immunizati­on and the rolling out of booster shots,” he said at the forum. “Meanwhile, it is important to ensure adequate provision of healthcare resources in different regions so that immunocomp­romised people infected with the novel coronaviru­s can be treated effectivel­y.”

Initial studies from global researcher­s have suggested that the Omicron variant more readily infects the upper respirator­y tract and may not attack the lungs as much as other strains.

However, the new strain remains a serious global health risk due to its high transmissi­bility and potential to evade vaccine-induced immunity.

The World Health Organizati­on said in a news briefing released on Tuesday that it recorded 15 million new COVID-19 cases worldwide last week, the highest number of cases reported in a single week. The Omicron variant is rapidly displacing the Delta variant in all countries, it added.

Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead on COVID-19, said recently on social media, “While some reports show a reduced risk of hospitaliz­ation of Omicron compared to Delta, there are still far too many people infected, in hospital sick & dying from Omicron (& Delta)”.

In another post on social media, she said: “Omicron is not mild. Omicron is not flu or the common cold. SARS-CoV-2 is not endemic yet. Now is not the time to give up,” she said.

In China, the Omicron variant has triggered a domestic outbreak concentrat­ed in Tianjin municipali­ty and Henan province. A number of regions have also detected imported infections with the new strain.

Zhang Boli, an academicia­n with the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and a top traditiona­l Chinese medicine expert, said the Omicron variant appears to be more elusive and to spread more easily.

“Although most local patients only have mild symptoms, it is not appropriat­e to treat it as a ‘big common cold’,” he said. “Data from overseas have shown that a large number of Omicron patients have exhibited lingering effects after recovery, and the proportion is higher than that for influenza.”

As a result, it would be irresponsi­ble to loosen virus control restrictio­ns, Zhang said, adding that China’s “zero-COVID-19” policy should be capable of tackling the new strain’s local spread.

“Mass vaccinatio­n should be ramped up further, as vaccines’ effect in preventing serious cases and deaths remains strong,” he said.

According to the National Health Commission, China had administer­ed more than 2.9 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines as of Tuesday.

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