Omicron reported in 57 countries, hospitalisations set to rise: WHO

"Preliminary analysis suggests that the mutations present in the Omicron variant may reduce neutralising activity of antibodies resulting in reduced protection from natural immunity," says the WHO. The new omicron variant prompted Malaysia to pause the transition to the endemic phase of the outbreak until it obtains more data.
"Preliminary analysis suggests that the mutations present in the Omicron variant may reduce neutralising activity of antibodies resulting in reduced protection from natural immunity," says the WHO. The new omicron variant prompted Malaysia to pause the transition to the endemic phase of the outbreak until it obtains more data.
Image: Samsul Said

The Omicron variant has been reported in 57 nations and the number of patients needing hospitalisation is likely to rise as it spreads, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Wednesday.

In its weekly epidemiological report, the WHO said more data was needed to assess the severity of disease caused by the variant and whether its mutations might reduce protection from vaccine-derived immunity.

“Even if the severity is equal or potentially even lower than for the Delta variant, it is expected that hospitalisations will increase if more people become infected and there will be a time lag between an increase in the incidence of cases and an increase in the incidence of deaths.”

On November 26, the WHO declared Omicron, first detected in Southern Africa, a variant of concern. It is the fifth SARS-CoV-2 strain to carry such a designation.

The number of reported Covid-19 cases in SA doubled in the week to December 5 to more than 62,000 and “very large” increases in incidence were seen in Eswatini, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Namibia and Lesotho.

The spread of Omicron, coupled with enhanced testing and low vaccination rates, may have played a role.

Referring to the risk of reinfection, the WHO said: “Preliminary analysis suggests that the mutations present in the Omicron variant may reduce neutralising activity of antibodies, resulting in reduced protection from natural immunity.

“There is a need for more data to assess whether the mutations present in the Omicron variant may result in reduced protection from vaccine-derived immunity and data on vaccine effectiveness, including the use of additional vaccination doses,” it said.

The variant can partially evade the protection from two doses of the Covid-19 vaccine produced by Pfizer and BioNTech, the research head of a laboratory at the Africa Health Research Institute in SA said on Tuesday, reporting the results of a small study.

Reuters

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