Omicron: Good news, bad news and what it all means – BBC News

Share Article

By James Gallagher
Health and science correspondent

The world is being hit by a tsunami of Omicron. Scientists, politicians and indeed all of us are grappling with what it means for our lives.
Restrictions are tightening in parts of the UK and other European countries in order to tackle the new variant.
There's a constant stream of new information – some worrying, some positive. So where do we stand?
It is easy to forget, but we are in a much brighter place than this time last year when many of us could not meet family on Christmas Day.
The "Christmas bubble" rules meant in parts of the country you could spend the day only with those you lived with. But there were limits on the size of gatherings across the UK.
The rise of the Alpha variant in late 2020 led to lockdowns in November and a long one in the New Year as the vaccination programme was only just getting going.
The rules currently in place or coming into force on Boxing Day in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are much gentler by comparison.
If you catch Omicron then you are less likely to become seriously ill than with previous variants.
Studies from around the world are painting a consistent picture that Omicron is milder than the Delta variant, with a 30% to 70% lower chance of people infected ending up in hospital.
Omicron can cause cold-level symptoms such as a sore throat, runny nose and a headache, but that does not mean it will be mild for everyone and some will still be seriously ill.
Changes to the virus seem to have made it less dangerous, but most of the reduced severity is down to immunity as a result of vaccination and previous bouts of Covid.
The worry is severity is only one half of the equation if you care about whether hospitals can cope.
If Omicron is half as likely to land you in hospital, but twice as many people are infected then the two cancel out and you're back to square one.
And Omicron's real talent is infecting people. It spreads faster than other variants and can bypass some of the immune protection from vaccines and prior infections.
The UK has record levels of Covid with confirmed cases on Thursday reaching nearly 120,000 – and this is an underestimate of what is really going on as not everyone gets a test and people who catch it more than once aren't included in the figures.
Old age has always been the biggest risk-factor for becoming seriously ill with Covid.
In the UK, most of the Omicron cases and people ending up in hospital are under the age of 40 so we do not know for sure what will happen when it reaches old and vulnerable populations.
The ability of Omicron to partially evade immunity means there is the potential for more older people to be infected than during the Delta wave.
Two doses of a vaccine offer little protection against catching Omicron, which led to a massive expansion of the booster campaign.
Now more than 31 million people in the UK have enhanced their immune defences.
However, protection against catching Omicron seems to wane after about 10 weeks. Protection against severe disease is likely to hold up much longer.
New medicines should keep even more patients out of hospital.
They are being given to people who are at high risk from Covid, including cancer patients and people who have had an organ transplant.
Molnupiravir is an anti-viral drug that disrupts Omicron's ability to replicate inside our bodies and cuts hospital admission by 30%. Sotrovimab is an antibody therapy that sticks to the virus and cuts hospital visits by 79%.
Both suppress the virus which buys time for the immune system to react.
A surge in Omicron could put more people in hospital at the same time as taking away the people needed to care for them.
The sheer volume of people catching Omicron is also affecting doctors, nurses and the rest of the NHS workforce as they have to isolate too.
Nearly 19,000 NHS staff were off with Covid on 19 December, which is 54% higher than the week before.
Meanwhile, NHS Providers, which represents hospital and ambulance services in England, says the health service is facing its busiest Christmas period ever. And that overall, 94.5% of adult beds were occupied compared with 89% last year.
The question is whether everything in our favour – milder, antivirals, boosters – is enough to deal with a variant that spreads faster than anything we've seen before.
Or will it take more restrictions to manage the Omicron wave?
The speed this is happening means we will know very quickly how this is going to shake down.
Follow James on Twitter
International aid response ramps up for Tonga
Arrested and beaten in Kazakhstan, say activists
Urgent US-Russia talks amid Ukraine tensions
'If you protest again, we'll kill you'
Letters of support pour in for nun who lost rape case
The OnlyFans star who may be jailed for his nudes
The radio station bringing worried Tongans together. Video
How to get aid safely into Covid-free Tonga
Why are China's Winter Olympics so controversial?
Divided French left fight doomed race of their own
Quiz of the week: Could you be the ruler of a remote island?
Like a drone that you sit in – but does it feel safe?
'Sometimes you have to sacrifice your happiness'
Olympian and world record holder Adam Peaty chats to Eddie Hearn
From eating crusts to hanging up horseshoes…
Why are superstitions and old wives tales so trusted?
© 2022 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.

source

You might also like

Surviving 2nd wave of corona
COVID-19

Surviving The 2nd Wave of Corona

‘This too shall pass away’ this famous Persian adage seems to be defeating us again and again in the case of COVID-19. Despite every effort

@voguewellness