Face masks should be worn again on public transport, experts say, as the Arcturus Covid variant continues to spread.
Five
people have died from the strain, according to the UK Health Security
Agency, while 135 sequences have been detected in the UK so far, and
there are believed to be around 104 cases as some people have been
sequenced twice.
Professor Stephen Griffin, chair of Independent
Sage, said that people should go back to testing regularly and wearing
face masks to protect from the virus.
He told MailOnline: “This
may seem like a throwback to last year, but the reality is the virus
continues to do harm and those least able to cope continue to suffer.
“In the absence of population-scale mitigations… the focus remains upon individual risk which is, for many, now much lower.
“If
[the] government won’t act to enable everyone to ‘live’ with Covid,
vulnerable people will continue to require precautions and, ideally,
others will act with an appropriate level of altruism.”
The new
strain, known as XBB.1.16, was first identified in January and emerged
from two previous potent strains of Omicron, BA.1 and BA.2.
Research indicates Arcturus could be one 1.2 times more infectious than the last major sub-variant.
Arcturus
has been monitored by the World Health Organisation (WHO) since 22
March, which upgraded it to a “variant of interest” in mid-April.
In
the UK, the virus is currently most prevalent in London, the North West
and South East, with the median age for cases being 74.54.
Dr
Vipin Vashishtha, a paediatrician and former head of the Indian Academy
of Pediatrics Committee on Immunisation, told The Hindustan Times that
Arcturus’s symptoms include a high fever, a cough and “itchy”
conjunctivitis or pinkeye.
Vaccine production was ramped up in
India and compulsory face masks have been introduced in some states,
with hospitals carrying out mock drills after the virus ripped through
the country. It is also now on the rise in Australia.
In the US,
Arcturus is now responsible for 9.6 per cent of American Covid cases,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the WHO.
Professor Lawrence Young, a virologist from the University of
Warwick told The Independent that the rise of the new variant in India
is a sign that “we’re not yet out of the woods”...<<<Read More>>>...
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