Omicron rewrites the COVID plan for 2022
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[December 17, 2021]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - As the Omicron variant
gains momentum in Europe and the United States, scientists are rewriting
their expectations for the COVID-19 pandemic next year.
Just weeks ago, disease experts were predicting that countries would
begin to emerge from the pandemic in 2022 after enduring a series of
surges driven by the Alpha, Beta, Gamma and Delta variants. First among
them would be populations with a significant amount of exposure to the
coronavirus, through a combination of infections and vaccination.
In those places, COVID was expected to ease into an endemic disease,
hopefully with less-severe periodic or seasonal outbreaks. Vaccines,
available for much of 2021 only in wealthy nations, could reach the
majority of the global population by the end of the year ahead.
But the rapid spread of the highly-mutated Omicron variant, identified
in late November, and its apparent ability to reinfect people at a
higher rate than its predecessors, is undermining that hope.
Already, countries are reverting to measures used earlier in the
pandemic: restricting travel, reimposing mask requirements, advising
against large gatherings for the winter holidays. While it is not quite
back to square one, much more of the world will need to be vaccinated or
exposed to COVID to get past the worst of the pandemic, disease experts
told Reuters.
"People are sick of the pandemic and God knows I am, but unless we can
get some urgency to compel our leaders to take action, I really see 2022
being a lot of more of the same that we saw in 2021," said Dr. Angela
Rasmussen, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease
Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada.
Even after COVID becomes a more endemic disease, new variants will spawn
outbreaks and seasonal surges for years to come.
"There's always going to be a baseline number of COVID cases,
hospitalizations and deaths," said Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious
disease expert at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. "A lot
of people haven't come to terms with that."
The hope is that the virus diminishes to the point where it is no longer
disruptive. But living with COVID-19 does not mean the virus is no
longer a threat.
Instead, people will need to be ready to adjust when the next variant
comes along, said Dr. Tom Frieden, chief executive of Resolve to Save
Lives, a global public health initiative, and former director of the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "You need to recognize
that at certain times, it's going to be safer to do things than at other
times."
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People walk across Westminster Bridge after new measures were
announced yesterday due to the Omicron coronavirus variant, in
London, Britain, November 28, 2021. REUTERS/Tom Nicholson
PANDEMIC PHASE ENDING IN 2022?
Some scientists are not entirely ready to abandon hope that some
parts of the world will emerge from the pandemic next year. More
than 270 million people have been infected with COVID, according to
the World Health Organization, while an estimated 57% of the global
population has received at least one vaccine dose, representing
potential protection that did not exist two years ago.
"Even if that immunity is not as good against Omicron, it doesn't
mean that it's worthless. And that immunity is more effective
against serious illness than it is against getting infected at all,"
said Dr. David Dowdy, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Johns
Hopkins.
So far, most of the studies looking at the effectiveness of vaccines
against Omicron have focused on neutralizing antibodies, which latch
on to the virus and prevent it from entering and infecting cells.
Blood test results from fully vaccinated people show Omicron has
learned to escape neutralization; a booster dose might restore that
protection.
Immune system T cells, which destroy infected cells, also appear
still to be able to recognize the variant. Many experts believe this
second line of defense will prevent hospitalizations and deaths.
"You still have a lot of people who are susceptible" because they
are not yet vaccinated, said Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious
disease specialist at New York University. She said that was among
the reasons she believes it will be some time before the world moves
from pandemic to endemic COVID-19.
In the meantime, living with COVID in 2022 will likely mean
assessing local risks and protecting oneself through vaccination,
masking and social distancing.
"When I go to the store this afternoon, what helps me is to know how
much COVID is in my community," said Dr. Robert Wachter, chair of
the Department of Medicine at University of California, San
Francisco.
"There will not be one state of the pandemic. There will be
different states for different people and for different regions," he
said. "And that's going to be the way it is for the foreseeable
future."
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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