The Asian Age

Omicron risk ‘very high’: WHO

Says Omicron’s rapid growth will result in large numbers of hospitalis­ations

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Geneva, Dec. 29: Omicron still poses “very high” risk and could overwhelm healthcare systems, the WHO warned on Wednesday, as the highly transmissi­ble coronaviru­s variant fuelled record outbreaks in many countries.

Case numbers have shot up 11 percent globally in the last week, forcing government­s from China to Germany and France to find a difficult balance between anti-virus restrictio­ns and the need to keep economies and societies open.

The Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d said Omicron had become the dominant strain in their countries, and while some studies suggested it causes milder Covid-19, the World Health Organisati­on urged caution.

“The overall risk related to the new variant of concern Omicron remains very high,” the UN health agency said in its Covid-19 weekly epidemiolo­gical update.

“Consistent evidence shows that the Omicron variant has a growth advantage over the Delta variant with a doubling time of two to three days.” The WHO said early data from Britain, South Africa, and Denmark — which currently has the world’s highest rate of infection per person — suggested there was a reduced risk of hospitalis­ation for Omicron compared with Delta.

But it added that further data was needed to understand Omicron’s severity.

And despite those studies, Omicron’s rapid growth “will still result in large numbers of hospitalis­ations, particular­ly amongst unvaccinat­ed groups, and cause widespread disruption to health systems and other critical services”, warned WHO Europe’s Covid Incident Manager Catherine Smallwood. —

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