East Bay Times

As omicron spreads, delta still surges

- By Carolyn Thompson

New York announced three more cases of the omicron variant of the coronaviru­s Saturday, bringing the number of state cases linked to the new variant to eight.

“The omicron variant is here, and as anticipate­d we are seeing the beginning of community spread,” state Health Commission­er Mary Bassett said in a news release.

The number of states finding the variant is growing as well, with Massachuse­tts and Washington state announcing their first cases Saturday, a day after New Jersey, Georgia, Pennsylvan­ia and Maryland reported their first confirmed cases. Missouri reported its first presumed case Friday.

The variant also has been detected in Nebraska, Minnesota, California, Hawaii, Colorado and Utah.

In New York, seven of the cases have been found in New York City, once a global epicenter of the pandemic, and the other in Suffolk County.

The arrival of omicron comes as hospitals statewide continue to strain under a surge in coronaviru­s cases, most traced to the delta variant, along with staffing shortages.

The number of people testing positive statewide each day for the virus has doubled in the last 30 days.

Gov. Kathy Hochul in recent days has authorized the Health Department to limit nonessenti­al, non-urgent procedures at hospitals close to running out of beds and deployed National Guard teams to relieve healthcare workers at facilities dealing with staffing issues and surging caseloads.

Fifteen members of the National Guard arrived at Monroe Community Hospital in Rochester on Saturday, WROC reported. Lt.

Gov. Brian Benjamin said Wednesday the state would send 13 National Guard teams to the western New York county, where County Executive Adam Bello has declared a state of emergency.

New York’s omicron cases so far appear to be unrelated, Hochul said. One of the known cases involved a man from Minnesota who was among 50,000 people who attended a three-day anime festival in New York City in November. Authoritie­s have urged anyone who attended the conference to get tested for COVID-19 and wear a mask in public.

Much remains unknown about omicron, including whether it is more contagious, as some health authoritie­s suspect, whether it can thwart vaccines and whether it makes people as sick as the original strain.

In Washington state, three cases of the omicron

variant were confirmed Saturday — one each in Thurston, Pierce and King counties, state health officials said. They noted the investigat­ion is still early, and details were not yet known on the travel histories of the patients, two men and a woman who range from 20 to 39 years old.

A Massachuse­tts woman in her 20s who had traveled out of state is the first known case of the variant detected in her state, the Department of Public Health announced Saturday. The unidentifi­ed woman — a resident of Middlesex County — is fully vaccinated and has experience­d mild symptoms.

A woman who recently traveled from South Africa became both New Jersey and Georgia’s first confirmed case after seeking care for moderate symptoms at an emergency room. The fully vaccinated

Georgia resident was in her home state for two days between arriving from South Africa and traveling onward to New Jersey, health officials in both states said.

Maryland’s first three cases of the omicron variant were found in the Baltimore metropolit­an region and include two people from the same household, authoritie­s said. One of the two is a vaccinated person who recently traveled to South Africa. The third case, detected in a vaccinated person with no recent travel history, is unrelated.

In Pennsylvan­ia, a man in his 30s from Philadelph­ia became that state’s first case. The Philadelph­ia Department of Public Health did not immediatel­y say whether the man was vaccinated against COVID-19 or if he had been traveling.

Missouri’s presumed first case involves someone who recently traveled within

the U.S., according to state health officials, who did not provide additional details about the St. Louis resident. The St. Louis Health Department said it was awaiting confirmati­on from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Case counts in California, Nebraska and Colorado grew Friday.

Five cases in Northern California were linked to a wedding in Wisconsin late last month, public health officials said. One of the individual­s had recently returned from traveling internatio­nally, according to the Alameda County Department of Public Health.

Health officials confirmed six new cases of the variant in southeaste­rn Nebraska. State health officials said the state’s first case likely stemmed from one of the six who recently traveled to Nigeria and returned on Nov. 23.

 ?? YUKI IWAMURA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A person takes a coronaviru­s exam at a mobile testing site near Grand Central Terminal on Friday in New York.
YUKI IWAMURA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A person takes a coronaviru­s exam at a mobile testing site near Grand Central Terminal on Friday in New York.

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