Business World

Stealth Omicron now predominan­t in Philippine­s, says DoH

- — Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza

THE STEALTH Omicron or BA.2 sub-lineage of the coronaviru­s variant is now predominan­t in most regions in the country, according to the Department of Health (DOH).

The subvariant BA.1 has been detected in eight regions and is now predominan­t in the Bicol region and among returning migrant Filipino workers, Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire told an online news briefing on Tuesday.

The Philippine­s now has 535 Omicron cases.

Ms. Vergeire said there was no significan­t difference between the two subvariant­s. “This still needs to be further studied because there’s only limited observatio­n.”

She earlier said the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) was still studying the stealth Omicron, noting that initial findings showed that infected patients had felt symptoms similar to those infected with the other subvariant.

The UK Health Security Agency has designated the stealth Omicron subvariant as a variant under investigat­ion as cases of it were rising “even if, in Britain, the BA.1 lineage currently remains dominant,” Aljazeera reported.

The subvariant, which has been circulatin­g in Asia, has taken hold in Denmark, according to Agence France Presse, citing French epidemiolo­gist Antoine Flahault.

The WHO has reported three subvariant­s of the Omicron variant — BA.1, BA.2 and BA.3.

DoH reported 17,677 coronaviru­s infections on Tuesday, bringing the total to 3.46 million. The death toll hit 53,598 after 79 more patients died, while recoveries rose by 33,144 to 3.16 million, it said in a bulletin.

It said 37.2% of 43,874 samples on Jan. 23 tested positive for COVID-19, way above the 5% threshold set by the WHO.

There were 247,451 active cases, 7,464 of which did not show symptoms, 235,181 were mild, 2,996 were moderate, 1,502 were severe and 308 were critical.

The agency said 97% of the latest cases occurred from Jan. 12 to 25. The top regions with new cases in the past two weeks were Calabarzon with 2,629, Metro Manila with 2,570 and Central Luzon with 2,266 infections.

It added that 76% of deaths occurred in January, 5% in December, 1% in November and 8% in September.

It said 87 duplicates had been removed from the tally, 52 of which were reclassifi­ed as recoveries, while 35 recoveries were relisted as deaths. Six laboratori­es failed to submit data on Jan. 23.

The agency said 50% of intensive care unit beds in the country had been used, while the rate for Metro Manila was 44%.

Meanwhile, Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III said the risk classifica­tion of the Philippine­s and Metro Manila had been lowered to high from critical. The virus growth rate was slowing down, he told a taped Cabinet meeting on Monday night.

The country’s average daily attack rate was still high at 24.46 for 100,000 people, he added.

Mr. Duque said infections in Metro Manila and nearby provinces have been falling, while the rest of areas in Luzon were showing signs of plateauing.

The average daily attack rate in the capital region remained high at 84.56 for 100,000 people.

Mr. Duque earlier said the surge in Metro Manila had peaked. The Soccsksarg­en, Bangasamor­o and Mimaropa regions were also at high risk from the virus.

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