Coronavirus variant from India not spreading as quickly as feared in Britain, expert says
- Epidemiologist Neil Ferguson said vaccines might be less effective at limiting the B. 1.617.2 variant’s spread
- Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned the variant might derail his plans to lift England’s lockdown fully on June 21

“There’s … a glimmer of hope from the recent data that, whilst this variant does still appear to have a significant growth advantage, the magnitude of that advantage seems to have dropped a little bit with the most recent data,” Neil Ferguson, an epidemiologist at Imperial College London, told BBC radio, adding more data was needed.
Ferguson, a member of the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE), said the initial rapid growth of B. 1.617.2 had been among people who had travelled and who had a higher chance of living in multi-generational households or in deprived areas, and the ease of transmission might not be replicated in other settings.
Graham Medley, also a member of SAGE and a professor of disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said that while the variant was growing quickly in some places, “we haven’t yet seen it take off and grow rapidly everywhere else”.

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“One of the key things we’ll be looking for in the coming weeks will be: how far does it spread outside those areas,” he said.