Hartford Courant

Data: Hospitaliz­ation less likely with omicron

- By Jill Lawless and Laura Ungar

LONDON — Preliminar­y data suggests that people with the omicron variant of the coronaviru­s are 50% to 70% less likely to be hospitaliz­ed than those with the delta strain, Britain’s public health agency announced Thursday.

The findings from the U.K. Health Security Agency add to emerging evidence that omicron produces milder illness than other variants. But scientists caution that any reductions in severity must be weighed against the fact that omicron spreads much faster than delta and is better at evading vaccines.

Based on cases in the U.K., a person with omicron is estimated to be 31% to 45% less likely to go to a hospital emergency department compared with someone with delta, “and 50 to 70% less likely to be admitted to hospital,” the agency said.

It cautioned that the analysis is “preliminar­y and highly uncertain” because of the small number of omicron patients in hospitals and the fact that most were in younger age groups. As of Dec. 20, there had been 132 people admitted to U.K. hospitals with confirmed omicron. Fourteen of them died, all between the ages of 52 and 96.

Countries around the world are watching Britain, where omicron is now dominant and where COVID-19 cases have surged by more than 50% in a week.

Experts not involved with the analysis called it encouragin­g.

“To me, it’s a small ray of sunlight among all the dark clouds,” said Dr. Jonathan Li, director of the Harvard/ Brigham Virology Specialty Laboratory.

The signs that omicron may cause less severe disease than delta also align with lab data suggesting omicron does not grow as well in cells derived from lungs, Li said.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? A man is tested for COVID-19 on Thursday at a walk-up site near the White House in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP A man is tested for COVID-19 on Thursday at a walk-up site near the White House in Washington.

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