The Citizen (Gauteng)

8 000 new cases daily

COVID RISE: DUE TO VACCINE HESITANCY, INFECTIOUS NATURE OF OMICRON

- Marizka Coetzer – marizkac@citizen.co.za

Important to get booster as it stimulates antibodies – doctor.

In the past few days, South Africa has continued to record more than 8 000 new Covid cases a day. Democratic Alliance shadow MEC for health Jack Bloom said the spike of Covid infections was driven by a more infectious omicron subvariant and it was spreading because people were spending time indoors due to colder weather.

“The vaccines often don’t prevent an infection but they are very good at preventing severe disease,” he said.

Bloom said the main problem was not how many people had the boosters, but the high number of vulnerable people who haven’t had one vaccine dose yet.

Professor Shabir Madhi, dean of the faculty of health sciences and professor of vaccinolog­y at the University of the Witwatersr­and, said vaccine hesitancy was not to blame for the resurgence of infections. “It contribute­s to what would otherwise be preventabl­e causes of hospitalis­ation and death,” he said.

Dr Angelique Coetzee said hesitancy to have the booster might play a slight role in the recent infections. “It is important to understand that the booster is not the answer. It is to get people to take the second shot, before boosters,” she added.

Coetzee said the vaccines do assist in preventing mild diseases. “What we are seeing, despite the recent spike, is due to mild infections. The vaccine will protect you against severe disease or hospitalis­ation and death. We can also see those numbers are low,

What we are seeing, despite the recent spike, is due to mild infections.

Dr Angelique Coetzee

so there is no strain on the healthcare system,” she explained.

Coetzee said if one has been vaccinated or have had omicron, one could still get infected again.

“The rise of infections was of the subvariant and because of the nature of the subvariant,” she explained.

General practition­er Dr Leon Odendaal said boosters were definitive­ly still necessary. He said doctors’ rooms have overflowed with patients of late with various symptoms from seasonal flu to Covid.

Odendaal said there were more than just Covid viruses affecting the community currently. “The majority of these infections, according to laboratory surveillan­ce, are still caused by Covid,” he said.

Odendaal said that was why it was important to get the booster shots. “We now know that the booster not only stimulates antibodies against Covid but also other parts of the immune response are stimulated,” he said.

“It will also in all likelihood be protective against the future possible mutations of the virus,” he said.

Ilse van Rooyen, who was fully vaccinated, said she was hesitant to get the booster. “After I took the second jab, I started getting a rash. I went to the doctor immediatel­y who diagnosed me with the shingles,” she said.

Van Rooyen had to take more than 20 pills daily to recover from the infection. She added she was scared when she got her booster shot that the side-effects would be even worse.

“You hear stories of people dying from taking the vaccine and the boosters, so you cannot help but wonder whether to get another jab,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa