New Straits Times

More dangerous variants could take hold, warn WHO experts

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GENEVA: The World Health Organisati­on’s emergency committee warned on Thursday that new and more dangerous Covid-19 variants were expected to spread around the world, making it harder to halt the pandemic.

The announceme­nt was further bad news as several countries battle a new wave of infections fanned by new variants, namely Delta, which was first identified in India.

“The pandemic is nowhere near finished,” the committee warned in a statement on Thursday, following a meeting a day earlier.

Committee chairman Didier

Houssin acknowledg­ed to reporters that “recent trends are worrying”.

He said a year-and-a half after the organisati­on first declared a so-called Public Health Emergency of Internatio­nal Concern (PHEIC) — its highest alert level — “we are still running after this virus and the virus is still running after us”.

For now, four concerning variants of Covid-19 are dominating the global pandemic picture: Alpha, Beta, Gamma and especially the rapidly spreading Delta variant.

But the committee warned that worse could lie ahead, pointing to “the strong likelihood for the emergence and global spread of new and possibly more dangerous variants of concern that may be even more challengin­g to control.”

WHO declares variants as being “of concern” when they are seen as either more transmissi­ble, more deadly or have the potential to get past some vaccine protection­s.

“The pandemic remains a challenge globally with countries navigating different health, economic and social demands,” the committee said.

“Countries with advanced access to vaccines and well-resourced health systems are under pressure to fully reopen their societies,” it said.

On the other hand, “countries with limited access to vaccines are experienci­ng new waves of infections, seeing erosion of public trust” as well as “growing economic hardship and in some instances, increasing social unrest”, it added.

The experts said as a result, many countries were making “increasing­ly divergent policy decisions that address narrow national needs which inhibit a harmonised approach to the global response”.

The experts added that “the use of masks, physical distancing, hand hygiene, and improved ventilatio­n of indoor spaces remains key to reducing transmissi­on”.

They underscore­d the need to vaccinate at least 10 per cent of the population of each country by September and vaccine sharing between richer countries and poorer ones.

“Many countries have now vaccinated their priority population­s.

“It is recommende­d that doses should be shared with countries that have limited access before expanding national vaccinatio­n programmes into lower risk groups,” the experts said.

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