Nottingham Post

‘Omicron appears more contagious’

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BORIS Johnson has told ministers that the Omicron variant of coronaviru­s appears to be “more transmissi­ble” than Delta.

The Prime Minister updated his Cabinet on the latest situation yesterday morning, as a scientist warned cases of the Omicron variant in the UK are soon expected to be higher than in some African countries placed on the travel red list.

Giving an account of the Cabinet meeting, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “The Prime Minister said it was too early to draw conclusion­s on the characteri­stics of Omicron but early indication­s were that it is more transmissi­ble than Delta.”

But the spokesman said there was no debate around the Cabinet table on whether to introduce Plan B of the Government’s plans to control the virus this winter.

Mr Johnson later said “now is the time” for people to get a booster jab.

“The booster programme is the fastest in Europe; I think we have done more boosters than any comparable country,” he told reporters.

“That doesn’t mean it couldn’t go faster.” He added: “I would certainly say to people that now is the time to get it and, of course, from Monday, we will be contractin­g the interval so you go down to three months and that will lead to a big uptick in the programme as well.”

It comes as Professor Tim Spector said early data suggested cases of the coronaviru­s mutation are doubling every two days, putting it on course to overtake some of the 11 countries from where travellers to the UK are now required to quarantine to try to stymie community transmissi­on.

New rules came into force in the early hours of yesterday, requiring all travellers to take a pre-departure test before heading to England. They will not be able to travel if they test positive. Prof Spector, professor of genetic epidemiolo­gy at King’s College London, told BBC Breakfast there was “very little point” in having travel restrictio­ns if case numbers exceeded those in red list countries.

He said: “The official estimates are about 350-odd Omicron cases, and because the current testing is missing a lot of those, it’s probably at least 1,000 to 2,000 I would guess at the moment.

“And we are expecting this to be doubling about every two days at the moment, so if you do your maths – assume it’s 1,000 at the moment, and you think it’s going to be doubling every two days, you can see that those numbers are going to be pretty (high) certainly in about 10 days’ time.

“By that time, we’ll probably have more cases than they will in some of those African countries. So I think these travel restrictio­ns do perhaps have their place initially, when cases are really low here and really high in the other country, but when we reach that equilibriu­m, there’s very little point in having them, in my opinion.”

A total of 336 cases of Omicron had been confirmed across the UK as of Monday, including 261 in England, 71 in Scotland and four in Wales.

 ?? ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Prime Minister Boris Johnson

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