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Omicron Variant Officially Hits the United States

DADO RUVIC
DADO RUVIC

The United States has identified its first case of the Omicron variant, which has already been reported in more than 20 other countries since the new coronavirus strain was first detected in southern Africa last week.

The infected patient—who is experiencing “mild symptoms”—is fully vaccinated, and returned to California from South Africa on Nov. 22, testing positive for the variant on Nov. 29, Dr. Anthony Fauci announced Wednesday.

During a White House press briefing on Wednesday, Fauci said that genomic sequencing of the sample at the University of California San Francisco which was examined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the positive case. The individual is self-quarantining and all close contacts have so far tested negative, he said.

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Fauci said that there was much to be learned about the new strain, but urged eligible Americans to “get boosted now,” adding that it was not immediately clear whether or not a variant-focused booster would be needed.

“When you get a high enough level of an immune response, you get spill-over protection, even against a variant that the vaccine wasn’t specifically directed at,” Fauci said, citing the vaccine’s enduring protection against severe disease with the Delta variant. He cautioned, however, that “we have to be prepared that there might be a diminution.”

Dr. Timothy Brewer, a professor of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, who has served on advisory boards and review panels for the WHO, CDC, and others, told The Daily Beast on Wednesday that boosters could help.

“We have seen based on lab studies, cross-protection against different variants,” Brewer said.

Determining the vaccine’s effectiveness against the Omicron variant will likely be determined in lab studies that take “about two to three weeks to do,” he added, but insight into its transmissibility will be largely dependent on just how quickly it spreads.

“The reason why we were able to do studies quickly on Delta was because Delta was so dominant, it was so transmissible,” he said. “Whereas Epsilon and Iota, which were first described in New York and California, they never really took off.”

Countries around the world have been scrambling to determine how best to respond to what the World Health Organization has characterized as the “very high” risk posed by the latest variant of the coronavirus which was first identified by researchers in South Africa.

According to the agency, which designated Omicron as a variant of concern on Friday, the strain features “a high number of mutations,” which have sparked worries about the potential for “immune escape” and “higher transmissibility.”

Biden: Omicron Is Coming Here, but Don’t Freak Out Yet

The last coronavirus variant to receive a similar designation was Delta, which quickly took the world by storm after it was first identified in the United Kingdom in the spring.

The WHO cautioned on Monday that “considerable uncertainties” remain as health experts examine emerging evidence around the variant’s threat, just how transmissible it is, and how well existing vaccines protect against infection. It urged countries around the world to move quickly toward vaccinating more of their eligible populations while also beefing up testing.

“We don’t have enough information right now,” Fauci said, echoing the agency’s assertion to reporters on Wednesday. He added that while the molecular profile of the new strain could suggest that it may be more transmissible, experts are still collecting data to predict its impact.

“It is too early to say,” he said. “We’re really very early in the process.”

Late last week, researchers at the Botswana Harvard HIV Reference Laboratory sequenced the genes of coronaviruses from positive test samples and uncovered the concerning and previously unreported mutation. Since then, cases have been detected in Germany, Italy, Belgium, Israel, Canada, and Hong Kong, among others.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said during a White House news conference on Tuesday that the CDC had been “actively looking” for the Omicron variant but at the time added that so far there was “no evidence” of it as the Delta variant remained the predominant strain representing 99.9 percent of all sequence sampled.

Since Omicron’s discovery, countries have banned passengers from southern Africa, citing a desire to combat the variant’s spread, with Japan, Israel, and Morocco barring all foreign visitors. Biden on Friday announced a ban on travelers from eight countries in the region.

Brewer contested that the travel bans “make absolutely no sense at all.”

“There’s no point in doing partial travel bans, because these viruses are so transmissible they’re just going to pop up in all kinds of different places,” he said. “By the time they put travel bans in southern Africa," Omicron cases "had already been described in a number of countries.”

While some officials have been accused of quickly blaming African nations for the variant, in spite of limited accessibility to vaccine doses across the continent, health officials in the Netherlands reported on Tuesday that the country had already logged a case of what has since been identified as an Omicron variant infection as early as Nov. 19. The case, along with a second on Nov. 23, predate the arrival of a pair of flights from South Africa that triggered a firestorm of targeted travel bans from the region.

Addressing the growing panic during a press conference on Monday, President Joe Biden foreshadowed what arrived just days later:

“Sooner or later, we’re going to see cases,” he said. “This variant is a cause for concern—not a cause for panic.”

Read more at The Daily Beast.

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