The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Metro Atlantan Ga.’s 3rd known case of omicron

- By Ariel Hart ahart@ajc.com

A third Georgian has tested positive for COVID-19 with the omicron variant, the state Department of Public Health announced Thursday.

The patient is an unvaccinat­ed metro Atlanta resident with no recent internatio­nal travel history, indicating the omicron variant of the virus may be spreading in Georgia.

“You’re going to have local transmissi­on,” said Dr. Carlos del Rio, distinguis­hed professor of infectious diseases at Emory University. “That’s how it always starts: First you have people who traveled, and then it starts spreading at home.”

“What this means is, get vaccinated. And if you have been vaccinated, get your booster.”

The patient has mild symptoms and is isolating at home, according to health officials. The state is tracing the person’s recent contacts in order to identify people who might have been exposed to the new variant. The DPH did not disclose the person’s sex or age.

Georgia’s first case of the new variant was detected Dec. 3. That person, a Georgia resident, had traveled through Georgia from South Africa and was diagnosed in New Jersey. Her travel stop in Georgia lasted two days.

The state’s second omicron case was announced Sunday, in a person who also had traveled from South Africa. The variant has now been identified in nearly 60 countries.

Officials have said that there are likely more cases in Georgia, but they can perform tests on only a small number of positive COVID19 samples to search for it.

The first U.S. case was reported Dec. 1. As of Thursday afternoon, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had recorded more than 40 cases in 23 states.

Most were young adults. About a third of those patients had traveled internatio­nally, according to the Associated Press.

The omicron variant has mutations that appear to allow it to spread much more quickly than even the delta variant, which drove a spike in cases in the late summer. So far, illnesses caused by omicron tend to be milder than other variants. The omicron variant is young, however, and severe disease takes time to develop, so scientists caution that we will know more about its severity in a couple of months.

Public health authoritie­s have so far reported only mild or moderate symptoms in the three Georgians.

Omicron appears better at eroding the immune response people develop from previous COVID19 infection or vaccinatio­n. But experts say vaccinatio­n will probably be important in preventing an infection from becoming severe.

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