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Coronavirus pandemic
World

Coronavirus: new Covid-19 variants emerge, likely reinfecting Omicron survivors

  • Current data do not suggest BA.4 and BA.5 cause people to get sicker than earlier Omicron variants, but BA.4 and BA.5 do appear to be more transmissible
  • One infectious disease expert says unvaccinated people will have a higher chance of not doing well if infected by the new variants

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This colorized scanning electron micrograph of a cell heavily infected with SARS-CoV-2 virus particles (orange/red) was captured at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in 2020. Photo: NIAID via ZUMA Wire/TNS
dpa

A pair of new Omicron subvariants has emerged, raising the possibility that survivors of earlier Omicron strains can get reinfected.

BA.4 and BA.5 have gained increasing attention in South Africa as weekly coronavirus cases tripled in the last two weeks, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

“It really came out of the blue over the weekend. We were already settling down with BA.2.12.1, and then BA.4 and BA.5?” said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious diseases expert at University of California, San Francisco. “It just seems like the latest chapter of a never-ending saga.”

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The rapid growth of BA.4 and BA.5 in South Africa has implications for a potential future surge in other countries. Until now, scientists had been reassured that people who survived the first Omicron variant over the winter, BA.1, were unlikely to be reinfected by the even more infectious subvariant BA.2, which is now dominant nationwide.

A medical staff holds up a sample collected from a patient tested for the novel coronavirus Covid-19 In December 2021. Photo: AFP
A medical staff holds up a sample collected from a patient tested for the novel coronavirus Covid-19 In December 2021. Photo: AFP

But the surge in cases in South Africa of BA.4 and BA.5 follow an earlier Omicron wave. An estimated 90 per cent of South Africa’s population has immunity to the earlier Omicron variants either due to surviving a natural infection or through vaccination.

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