The Zimbabwe Independent

Omicron milder, but concern remains

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THE wave of Omicron appears to be milder according to preliminar­y studies published in the UK and South Africa.

Early evidence suggests fewer people need hospital treatment than with other variants — with estimates ranging from a 30% to a 70% reduction.

But the concern remains that even if Omicron is milder, the sheer number of cases could overwhelm hospitals.

More than 100 000 cases have been reported in the UK in a single day for the first time.

A deeper understand­ing of the severity of Omicron will help countries decide how to respond to the virus.

e study in Scotland has been tracking coronaviru­s and the number of people ending up in hospital.

It said that if Omicron behaved the same as Delta, they would expect about 47 people to have been admitted to hospital already. At the moment there are only 15.

e researcher­s said they were seeing a roughly two-thirds reduction in the number needing hospital care, but there were very few cases and few at-risk elderly people in the study.

Dr Jim McMenamin, the national Covid-19 incident director at Public Health Scotland, described it as a "qualified good news story".

He said the data was "filling in a blank" about protection against hospitalis­ation, but cautioned it was "important we don't get ahead of ourselves".

e Omicron variant is spreading incredibly quickly and a high number of cases could wipe out any benefit of it being milder.

Prof Mark Woolhouse, from the University of Edinburgh, said: "An individual infection could be relatively mild for the vast majority of people, but the potential for all these infections to come at once and put serious strain on the NHS remains."

Meanwhile, another study in South Africa also points to the Omicron wave being milder.

It showed people were 70-80% less likely to need hospital treatment, depending on whether Omicron is compared to previous waves, or other variants currently circulatin­g.

However, it suggested there was no difference in outcomes for the few patients that ended up in hospital with Omicron.

"Compelling­ly, together our data really suggest a positive story of a reduced severity of Omicron compared to other variants," said Prof Cheryl Cohen of the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases, in South Africa.

Why milder?

e reduction in severity is thought to be a combinatio­n of the fundamenta­l properties of the Omicron variant as well as high levels of immunity from vaccinatio­ns and previous infections.

An analysis of Omicron by Imperial College London suggests Omicron's mutations have made it a milder virus than Delta.

e researcher­s said the chances of turning up at Emergency would be 11% lower with Omicron than Delta if you had no prior immunity.

However, that now applies to relatively few people in the UK due to high levels of vaccinatio­n and infection.

e same analysis said that accounting for immunity in the population meant a 25% to 30% lower risk of visiting Emergency with Omicron and about a 40% reduction in needing to stay in hospital for more than a day.

Prof Neil Ferguson, one of the researcher­s, said: "It is clearly good news, to a degree."

However, he warned the reduction was "not sufficient to dramatical­ly change the modelling" and the speed that Omicron is spreading meant "there's the potential of still getting hospitalis­ations in numbers that could put health services in a difficult position".

Prof Peter Openshaw — an Imperial College immunologi­st who was not one of the study's authors — said the early signs indicated the variant could be less severe but said arguing the three studies showed it had "just changed into a common cold" would be the "wrong interpreta­tion" of them.

Laboratori­es' studies have suggested potential reasons Omicron could be milder.

e University of Hong Kong found Omicron was better at infecting the airways, but worse at getting into the deep tissues of the lungs, where it can do more damage.

e University of Cambridge found the variant was not as good at fusing lung cells together, which happens in the lungs of people who become severely ill.

e UK Health Security Agency is expected to publish early real-world data on Omicron soon, which could give further indication­s of the variant's severity. — BBC.

 ?? ?? Although the Omicron variant is mild, hospitals may be overwhelme­d.
Although the Omicron variant is mild, hospitals may be overwhelme­d.

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