The Standard Journal

Scientists struggle to understand the competitio­n between omicron and delta

- By Melissa Healy

As the pandemic’s third year dawns, Americans are feeling fatigued and confused. And it’s all omicron’s fault.

Even scientists are deeply uncertain about how quickly or even whether the new variant will eclipse delta, as well as who is likely to fall ill with which variant and how sick those people will become.

“It does feel like omicron has changed everything we thought we knew” about the virus, said Dr. Megan Ranney, associate dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health. “This feels like a strange turning point, potentiall­y, in the pandemic.”

Clues about the pandemic’s next phase have begun to emerge, but they have been conflictin­g and prone to error. Torrents of new data and statistics tumble out daily, but what they mean isn’t always clear. Some seem quite reassuring, others deeply alarming.

Meanwhile, decisions need to be made: Visit grandma in her nursing home? Attend that New Year’s gathering? Wait hours in line for a COVID-19 test because you woke up with a scratchy throat? Send your kid back to college when she might be sent home in two weeks? Wear a mask ... everywhere?

Here’s what we know about omicron and the state of the pandemic — and what we don’t.

NEW INFECTIONS

The United States has notched a new high in confirmed infections, with an average of 277,241 new cases a day for the last full week of 2021.

The previous record was 259,759, set early last January. A week later, daily COVID-19 deaths reached their zenith of 4,048, and for the next month that figure rarely fell below 2,000.

As worrisome as that history sounds, it is unlikely to repeat itself, because there are stark difference­s between then and now. Most importantl­y, the number of Americans who are fully vaccinated has gone from about 350,000 to more than 204 million, with 68 million of those having also received a booster shot.

HOSPITALIZ­ATIONS

Among people over 65, the vaccinated are six times less likely than the unvaccinat­ed to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19. The difference is twice that for people 18 to 49.

The benefit of vaccines appears evident in the current surge. While hospitaliz­ations climbed almost 20% in the week that ended Monday, hitting a daily average of 9,442, that figure is 43% below the peak nearly a year ago.

Similarly, with an average of 1,085 deaths a day over the last week, COVID-19 is killing about half as many people as it did during last winter’s surge.

Still, it’s unclear how the surge in cases will play out, because it typically takes two to four weeks for an infection to send a person to the hospital. Those who die of COVID-19 often spend weeks in the hospital before succumbing.

And even after hospitaliz­ation and death rates are known, researcher­s will have to sift through medical records and genetic data to compare the effects of omicron and delta, and how vaccinatio­n and variant type interacted. That work could take weeks or months.

In the meantime, researcher­s in places that have been host to the omicron variant for a bit longer than the United States have offered a possible glimpse of the future here.

An analysis by South African scientists suggests that people thought to be infected with omicron were about 70% less likely to become severely ill and 80% less likely to be hospitaliz­ed than those who were infected with delta.

A study conducted in England found that after accounting for the effects of vaccinatio­n, omicron-infected people were about 45% less likely than people infected with delta to wind up in the hospital.

OMICRON’S QUEST FOR DOMINANCE

It’s unclear whether the current trends are being driven more by the omicron variant or by the delta variant.

On Dec. 22, a projection released by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggested that omicron had rocketed to dominance in the United States, jumping from 3% of all cases to 73% over two weeks in early December.

News reports treated omicron’s sudden takeover as a fait accompli rather than the projection it was. The reports also seemed to suggest that the new variant was responsibl­e for other shocking developmen­ts: New cases had topped those seen in last September’s wave, and intensive care units nationally had reached about three-quarters capacity.

The projection, it turned out, was wrong.

A week later, the CDC would downgrade omicron’s presence on Dec. 18 to an estimated 22.5% of new U.S. cases, predicting that by Christmas Day that figure would hit 59%.

Although still much more transmissi­ble than delta, omicron does not seem to have carried out the stunning coup that had been announced. What happened?

The CDC oversees the sequencing of about 80,000 specimens a week — about 14% of new cases, at last count — but it takes weeks to compile the results. That’s too slow for public health authoritie­s guiding current policy.

So the agency’s modelers must take three-week-old data and make judgments about how that mix of variants is likely to have changed. That exercise, known as “Nowcasting,” uses a smattering of newer genetic sequencing results supplied by the states to update a variant’s national growth rate. But choosing the wrong sample — an easy mistake in a highly fluid situation — can lead to significan­t errors.

The big takeaway: the delta variant is still very much among us.

Emory University epidemiolo­gist Jodie Guest said that in a surge of new cases, delta is likely to do what it has done since its arrival last March: send many who remain unvaccinat­ed to the hospital, or worse.

“I routinely hear that omicron is mild, not going to be a big deal, and hopefully that’s true,” Guest said. “But clearly delta is still here, and everyone took delta pretty seriously. It makes sense from the hospitaliz­ations we’re seeing that there’s more delta going on than we had estimated.”

 ?? Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images north america/Tns ?? Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Chief Medical Adviser to the President, speaks with guests after President Joe Biden delivered remarks to commemorat­e World AIDS Day at the White House on Dec. 1, 2021, in Washington, D.C. The omicron and delta variants have scientists mystified as to their relative potency.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images north america/Tns Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Chief Medical Adviser to the President, speaks with guests after President Joe Biden delivered remarks to commemorat­e World AIDS Day at the White House on Dec. 1, 2021, in Washington, D.C. The omicron and delta variants have scientists mystified as to their relative potency.

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