Los Angeles Times

President faces uncertain threat with Omicron

Biden tries to get out in front of the variant, but evolving COVID risks are testing the nation’s patience.

- By Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — President Biden is racing to show the country that his administra­tion is prepared for the Omicron variant as the World Health Organizati­on warned there’s a “very high” risk of new global outbreaks, a possibilit­y that could prove demoralizi­ng to Americans weary of a pandemic that began nearly two years ago.

“This variant is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic,” Biden said from the White House after emerging from a meeting with public health advisors Monday.

Much about Omicron, which was first identified in South Africa last week, remains unclear. Some scientists fear it could prove highly contagious or evade protection from vaccines that have already been developed, but public health officials said it could take two weeks to develop clearer answers to those questions. No evidence has emerged that Omicron’s symptoms are different or more severe than previous variants.

The uncertaint­y surroundin­g the variant has left Biden in a delicate situation where he must demonstrat­e that he’s taking the potential threat seriously while tamping down grim speculatio­n before scientists assemble a more complete picture.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention mentioned the emergence of the Omicron variant when updating its guidance on booster shots on Monday. Instead of simply making boosters available to all adults, the agency said another dose was recommende­d to increase protection against the coronaviru­s.

Biden said that he’s “sparing no effort and removing all roadblocks to keep the American people safe,” adding that his administra­tion is already working with pharmaceut­ical companies to formulate updated vaccines if necessary. However, he emphasized, “we do not yet believe that additional measures will be needed.” The president said he had no plans for new restrictio­ns on travel or businesses.

Omicron cases have already been detected in several countries, including Britain and Canada, and Biden said he expected it to reach the United States as well.

“Sooner or later, we’re going to see cases of this new variant here,” he said. “We’ll have to face this new threat just like we’ve faced those that have come before it.”

The swiftness of Biden’s public response to Omicron

— which he mispronoun­ced as “Omnicron” several times — reflects a bitter understand­ing of how variants can alter the course of the pandemic. The highly contagious Delta variant, which was first identified in India, ripped through unvaccinat­ed communitie­s in the U.S., causing a surge in deaths at a time when many Americans had expected the threat to be subsiding.

Dr. Howard Koh, a Harvard University professor who served as assistant secretary at the Department of Health and Human Services under President Obama, described it as a “public health purgatory.”

Now Omicron is crowding Biden’s schedule. His meeting with public health officials on Monday was his second in two days, and on Thursday he’s scheduled to visit the National Institutes of Health, headquarte­red just outside Washington.

“The challenge is in conveying uncertaint­y in unanswered questions without engenderin­g panic among policymake­rs,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “That is a very nuanced and difficult message to convey.”

Adalja said officials have struggled to calibrate their communicat­ions about COVID-19, “something that has woefully been deficient for the last two years.”

He criticized the administra­tion for announcing a ban on internatio­nal visitors from South Africa and other nations in the region, describing the policy “as porous, ineffectua­l and punishing toward countries that were adept at identifyin­g and alerting the world to this variant.”

In his remarks, Biden praised South Africa for quickly reporting the new variant, saying “this kind of transparen­cy is to be encouraged and applauded because it increases our ability to respond to any new threats.”

Omicron is a reminder of the danger of uncontroll­ed spread in developing countries with low vaccinatio­n rates, scenarios that can allow the virus to mutate into new variants. Biden reiterated his commitment to sharing vaccines with the rest of the world, and he’s promised more than 1 billion doses by next fall. He emphasized that none of the donations would reduce the availabili­ty of shots for Americans.

Biden said the travel ban would buy the U.S. some time to keep distributi­ng vaccines and encouragin­g people to get their shots. Many Republican lawmakers have fought vaccine requiremen­ts, and an estimated 47 million American adults have still not received a single dose of the vaccine despite its wide availabili­ty.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, Biden’s top medical advisor, told ABC News that he expects vaccines and booster doses, which are available for all adults, will prove effective against Omicron.

“We don’t know exactly what’s going on with this variant, but I would assume, and I think it’s a reasonable assumption, that when you get vaccinated and boosted and your level [of antibodies] goes way up, you’re going to have some level of protection, at least against severe disease,” he said.

Fauci said people considerin­g getting their shots should do so, and not wait for pharmaceut­ical companies to produce new versions of their vaccines to handle Omicron, and he emphasized that it’s unclear whether changes to vaccines will even be necessary.

Pfizer and Moderna, the leading producers of twodose vaccines in the United States, have said modified vaccines could be developed in the coming months.

It’s normal for viruses to mutate. Omicron is the latest in a series of variants that have been identified over the course of the pandemic, some of which have proved insignific­ant.

“This isn’t the first variant and it won’t be the last,” said Amanda McClelland, senior vice president of Prevent Epidemics and Resolve to Save Lives at Vital Strategies, a New York City-based public health nonprofit.

Although the Delta variant has proved damaging, others such as Gamma and Beta were labeled “variants of concern” by the World Health Organizati­on but have not become household names.

‘Sooner or later, we’re going to see cases of this new variant here. We’ll have to face this new threat just like we’ve faced those that have come before it.’

— PRESIDENT BIDEN

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT BIDEN discusses the new coronaviru­s variant onscreen as trader Mark Puetzer works on the f loor of the New York Stock Exchange. “This variant is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic,” Biden said.
Richard Drew Associated Press PRESIDENT BIDEN discusses the new coronaviru­s variant onscreen as trader Mark Puetzer works on the f loor of the New York Stock Exchange. “This variant is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic,” Biden said.

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