An internal CDC document said the variant, first detected in India
and now dominant across the globe, is as contagious as chickenpox
and far more contagious than the common cold or flu. It can be
passed on even by vaccinated people, and may cause more serious
disease than earlier coronavirus strains.
The document, entitled "Improving communications around vaccine
breakthrough and vaccine effectiveness", said the variant required a
new approach to help the public understand the danger - including
making clear that unvaccinated people were more than 10 times more
likely than those who are vaccinated to become seriously ill or die.
"Acknowledge the war has changed," it said. "Improve communications
around individual risk among vaccinated."
Recommended preventative measures included making vaccines mandatory
for health care professionals to protect the vulnerable and a return
to universal wearing of face masks.
The CDC confirmed the authenticity of the document, which was first
reported by the Washington Post.
While vaccinated people were less likely to become infected, once
they contracted such "breakthrough infections" from Delta - unlike
the case with earlier variants - they might now be just as likely as
the unvaccinated to pass the disease on to others.
"High viral loads suggest an increased risk of transmission and
raised concern that, unlike with other variants, vaccinated people
infected with Delta can transmit the virus," CDC head Rochelle
Walensky said in a statement.
On Friday the CDC released data from a study of an outbreak in
Massachusetts in which it said three quarters of those infected had
been fully vaccinated. That study played a pivotal roll in a CDC
decision this week to again recommend that vaccinated people wear
masks in some situations, Walensky said.
'VIRUS HAS BECOME FITTER'
The CDC has said that as of July 26, 6,587 people have experienced
breakthrough COVID-19 infections after being fully vaccinated and
were hospitalized or have died. It stopped reporting on mild
infections this spring but in the report, it estimated that there
were about 35,000 symptomatic infections each week in the United
States.
In parts of the world where large numbers of people have yet to be
vaccinated, the Delta variant has led once again to surging death
rates and hospitalisations.
The head of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus, said health systems in many countries were now being
overwhelmed: "Hard-won gains are in jeopardy or being lost," he told
a news conference.
The global health body's top emergency expert Mike Ryan told
reporters that vaccines were nevertheless still effective at
preventing serious illness and death: "We are fighting the same
virus but a virus that has become fitter."
Even in rich countries that were among the first to roll out
vaccination campaigns, cases have surged. While vaccines have so far
kept death rates lower, large populations remain vulnerable,
especially those who refuse vaccines, a particular problem in parts
of the United States where voters supported former President Donald
Trump. Trump is the only living president not to have participated
in public service campaigns encouraging people to take the vaccine.
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Nearly a third of U.S. adults have yet to get a
first shot. Areas where vaccination rates are
low have seen sharp rises in cases in recent
weeks, and authorities fear hospitalisations and
deaths are not far behind.
The top U.S. infectious diseases specialist, Dr
Anthony Fauci, told Reuters he expected that
vaccines, which so far have received only
emergency approval, could begin getting full
regulatory approval in August, and that this
could help persuade more people to get
vaccinated.
In Britain, where the Delta variant caused a
sharp surge in infections in recent months
despite one of the world's fastest inoculation
campaigns, a panel advising the government said
protection from vaccines was likely to wane over
time, meaning vaccination campaigns would
probably last for years.
On Tuesday, the CDC, which had advised
vaccinated Americans months ago that they no
longer needed to wear masks, reversed course,
saying even the fully vaccinated should wear
face coverings in situations where the virus was
likely to spread.
On Thursday, U.S. President Joe Biden urged
local governments to pay people to get
vaccinated and set new rules requiring federal
workers to provide proof of vaccination or face
regular testing, mask mandates and travel
restrictions.
"The main thing that does change (because of
Delta) is that masks will still be used and that
in countries where this requirement has been
lifted, it will have to be re-introduced," said
Carlo Federico Perno, head of microbiology and
immunology diagnostics at Rome's Bambino Gesł
Hospital.
ASIAN COUNTRIES TIGHTEN RESTRICTIONS
Countries in Asia, many of which avoided the
worst outcomes that hit Western nations in 2020,
have been particularly hard hit in recent weeks.
Several announced new restrictions on Friday.
From Monday, army personnel will help police
Australia's biggest city Sydney, checking that
people who have tested positive are isolating.
The Philippines announced a plan to put the
Manila capital region, home to more than 13
million people, in lockdown for two weeks.
In Japan, where a surge in cases has
overshadowed the Olympic Games, the government
proposed states of emergency through the end of
August in three prefectures near Tokyo and the
western prefecture of Osaka.
"Infections are broadening. The situation is
extremely severe," Economy Minister Yasutoshi
Nishimura said, warning infections had not yet
reached a peak.
(Reporting by Reuters journalists in Washington,
New York, Geneva, London, New Delhi, Sydney,
Hanoi, Tokyo and Bengaluru; Writing by Peter
Graff; Editing by Edmund Blair and Daniel
Wallis)
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