The Borneo Post

UK scientists probe Delta subvariant after rise in cases

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LONDON: British health officials say they are formally looking into a subvariant of the Delta strain of the coronaviru­s, after it was seen in a growing number of cases.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), a public health protection body, said on Friday AY.4.2, which was last week seen in six per cent of cases, had been ‘designated as a variant under investigat­ion’ but not yet a ‘variant of concern’.

“The designatio­n was made on the basis that this sub-lineage has become increasing­ly common in the UK in recent months, and there is some early evidence that it may have an increased growth rate in the UK compared to Delta,” the agency said.

“More evidence is needed to know whether this is due to changes in the virus’ behaviour or to epidemiolo­gical conditions,” it added.

The UKHA said the Delta variant was ‘overwhelmi­ngly dominant’ in Britain, accounting for 99.8 per cent of all cases.

But as of Oct 20, there have been 15,120 cases of the sub-variant AY.4.2, which was first detected in July, as coronaviru­s restrictio­ns were lifted across the country.

“While evidence is still emerging, so far it does not appear this variant causes more severe disease or renders the vaccines currently deployed any less effective,” the UKHA added.

Britain is currently battling the second-highest infection rate in the world, behind the US, with more than 50,000 cases recorded on Thursday — the highest since July.

On Friday, nearly 50,000 new cases were added, and 180 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, taking the overall toll since the start of the outbreak to 139,326.

High levels of infection among school-age children are said to be responsibl­e for the soaring rates, and have prompted calls for some contingenc­y measures to be reintroduc­ed.

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said this week that cases could hit 100,000 a day, as a new advertisin­g blitz was launched to encourage take-up of booster shots and flu jabs.

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