Santa Fe New Mexican

Cases of variant strain of coronaviru­s in Colorado, California raise alarm

Officials say discoverie­s of mutant cases in Colo., Calif., make widespread vaccinatio­ns imperative

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

A contagious variant of the coronaviru­s spreading through Britain has left that nation grappling with new lockdowns, curtailed air travel and a surge in infections. Now the same variant has appeared in Colorado and California, threatenin­g to complicate what had seemed a hopeful, if halting, path to recovery from the pandemic in the United States.

Scientists do not know how widely the new mutant may have spread in the United States. But the answer to that question will color virtually every aspect of the nation’s pandemic response: hospital treatment, community lockdowns, school closures and more.

“The overall picture is pretty grim,” said Bill Hanage, a public health researcher at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

The arrival of the variant also makes it all the more imperative that Americans receive vaccinatio­ns in great numbers, and more quickly, scientists said. A pathogen that spreads easily is more difficult to contain, and a greater percentage of the population must be inoculated to turn back the pandemic.

Yet even as the variant surfaced in the United States, officials with the Trump administra­tion acknowledg­ed Wednesday that the vaccine rollout was going too slowly. Just 2.1 million people had received their first dose as of Monday morning, far short of the 20 million goal.

“We agree that that number is lower than what we hoped for,” said Moncef Slaoui, scientific adviser to Operation Warp Speed, the federal effort to accelerate vaccine developmen­t and distributi­on.

The federal government has enrolled 40,000 pharmacy locations in that program designed to accelerate vaccine distributi­on, Slaoui and other officials said.

The new variant, called B.1.1.7, is not thought to be more deadly than previous variants, nor does it seem to cause more severe illness. Masks, physical distancing and hand hygiene are still the best ways to contain its spread. Current vaccines are likely to be effective against the variant and any others that may emerge in the short term.

But given the mutant’s apparent contagious­ness, scientists fear that its toehold in the United States augurs another difficult chapter in the pandemic. Gov. Gavin Newsom of California announced Wednesday that a case of the new variant had been discovered in the state.

Officials in San Diego County identified the patient as a 30-yearman who had not traveled outside the United States, suggesting the virus was transmitte­d by someone else in the community — a sign that the variant is already spreading. A household contact of the man has developed symptoms, the officials said, and is being tested for the variant.

Officials in Colorado confirmed one patient and identified a second suspected case. Both men are in the National Guard assigned to a nursing home in Simla, Colo., about 80 miles southeast of Denver. The confirmed patient also had not traveled.

“There’s no reason to think that that community is particular­ly special in any way,” Hanage said. “It’s completely reasonable to think it’s in a lot of other places, but we just haven’t looked for it yet.”

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday they were working with state laboratori­es in California, Delaware and Maryland to analyze patient samples for infection with the new variant. Agency scientists also plan to analyze up to 3,500 viral genomes each week to detect the new mutant and other variants as they emerge.

The virus’s debut in the United States underscore­s the need for urgent steps to tamp down transmissi­on, experts said. If the variant is spreading in this country, it will bring not just an increase in the number of cases, but also of hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

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