Lodi News-Sentinel

New coronaviru­s strains first seen in California have CDC concerned

- Jennifer Schladebec­k

Mutated strains of coronaviru­s emerging all over the world, most recently in California, have added an extra layer of urgency in the race to inoculate the public against the fastspread­ing disease.

Two new strains of COVID-19, initially detected in the Golden State, were officially dubbed “variants of concern” on Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control. The agency said early data revealed that they could be up to 20% more transmissi­ble than the initial strain and warned some coronaviru­s treatments may not protect as well against the mutations.

While initial studies showed antibodies from vaccinated people appear to be less effective at neutralizi­ng the mutation, the CDC stopped short of saying the shots would be ineffectiv­e against the variants. Researcher­s noted that the lower level of antibodies could still be enough to protect against the strains.

Three other variants — one first detected in the United Kingdom, another in South Africa and another in Japan and Brazil — are also on the CDC’s list of variants of concern. They’ve proven to be 50% more transmissi­ble than the initial coronaviru­s strain, according to the agency.

Another three have been dubbed “variants of interest,” but none has yet fallen under the CDC’s most dire classifica­tion of “variant of high consequenc­e.”

The shape-shifting coronaviru­s has sent officials scrambling to speed up vaccine distributi­on with the hope that citizens can achieve herd immunity before the virus transforms into something more deadly. While numbers have been mostly in decline in the United States in recent weeks, experts have expressed worry that variants could reverse the positive trajectory.

In the United States, three vaccines have been approved for emergency use, including Johnson & Johnson’s one-shot treatment. Two-dose vaccines developed by Pzfizer/BioNTech and Moderna are also being distribute­d nationwide.

 ?? YONG KIM/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? A pedestrian walks past a sign for the public to wear a mask near Jefferson University Hospitals in South Philadelph­ia on Nov. 28, 2020.
YONG KIM/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER A pedestrian walks past a sign for the public to wear a mask near Jefferson University Hospitals in South Philadelph­ia on Nov. 28, 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States