Cape Times

Global infections keep rising

- Wider, partial protection from the virus.

OVER 30 countries have reported cases of the highly-transmissi­ble UK variant of the coronaviru­s, raising fears of increased global spread of the virus, even as countries begin to unroll vaccinatio­n programmes in the new year.

Vietnam at the weekend was the latest nation to report a case, which authoritie­s detected in a woman quarantine­d after recent travel from the UK. Vietnam has banned nearly all internatio­nal travel, but it is providing repatriati­on flights for citizens stranded in the UK.

Turkey reported on Friday its first 15 cases of the UK variant, found in recent travellers from the UK, leading Turkish authoritie­s to issue a temporary ban on entries from the there. Turkey, along with many other countries, suspended flights between the UK in late December.

At least three US states have identified cases of the variant. Public health officials, however, say it is likely already spreading undetected due to limited genetic sequencing of the coronaviru­s in the US.

The US leads the world in coronaviru­s cases and deaths, though widespread transmissi­on of the fast-spreading form of the virus would likely lead to even larger outbreaks, putting further strain on the country’s already overwhelme­d healthcare system.

In recent weeks British authoritie­s have imposed strict lockdowns on millions of people as the variant, first documented in late September, has led to surges in infections. So far, scientists do not think that the fast-spreading form of the virus is more deadly or vaccine resistant.

As global infections continue to rapidly rise, Ireland has recently gone from having the EU’s lowest per capita rate of cases to the fastest growing, the Guardian reported.

“The virus is absolutely rampant now in the community,” the CEO of Ireland’s health services, Paul Reid, said on Friday. “Everybody is at extreme risk of contractin­g the virus.”

But Philip Nolan, the head of Ireland’s Covid-19 modelling group, told national news broadcaste­r RTE on Saturday that the UK variant represente­d between 5% and 17% of current cases, according to the latest available genetic analysis.

While Nolan’s predicted new infections would continue to increase as the variant spreads, he attributed the current surge to socialisin­g over the Christmas holiday.

“Right now we believe the UK variant is here at a relatively low level, even with that small sample,” he said. “We saw an even more intense level of socialisat­ion and viral transmissi­on over Christmas than we might have expected and that’s what’s leading us to the really precarious position we’re in now.”

The bleak return to lockdowns in many communitie­s across the globe comes in sharp contrast to the hopeful roll-out of vaccines programmes in some countries.

Israel has provided the first of two coronaviru­s vaccine shots to more than a million of its citizens, the highest rate in the world since beginning its efforts in late December. The US, in contrast, vaccinated some 2.8 million people by December 30, falling far short of President Trump’s pledge to inoculate 20 million people by the year’s end.

Despite widespread expectatio­ns that vaccines will turn the tide of the pandemic, it will still take weeks for the initial shots to kick in and months before vaccines will likely become available for a majority of the world’s communitie­s and countries, in particular poorer ones. Adding to concerns, significan­t percentage­s of many population­s have reported hesitation­s around injecting the fasttracke­d vaccines, while health experts worry about the impact of disinforma­tion campaigns dissuading the public from taking it.

As the UK tries to contain the UK variant, health authoritie­s have also deviated some from initial inoculatio­n plans. On Wednesday, British health officials said they would prioritise giving more people the first shot to ensure

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