A new wave of Coronavirus infections is “definitely under way” in England due to the Delta variant which was first identified in India, a Br...
A new wave of Coronavirus infections is “definitely under way” in England due to the Delta variant which was first identified in India, a British government advisory scientist said on Saturday.
“The race is firmly on between the vaccine programme…
and the Delta variant third wave,” said Professor Adam Finn, a member of the
Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), Xinhua news agency
reported.
Acknowledging the recent surge in infections, Finn
told the BBC: “Perhaps we can be a little bit optimistic it’s not going up any
faster, but nevertheless it’s going up — so this third wave is definitely under
way.”
Stressing on the facts that the highest number of
cases of the Delta variant is among the 16 to 25 year-olds, Finn said that
older people are still “much more likely to end up in hospital.”
“As far as vaccines are concerned, the main
emphasis everywhere at the moment is immunizing adults because it’s adults that
suffer predominantly from this infection,” he said.
Epidemiologist Mike Tildesley has said he is
“cautiously hopeful” that hospital admissions in Britain will not be on the
same scale as in January.
Tildesle who is a member of the Scientific Pandemic
Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M), another government advisory body, said
that cases have been “creeping steadily”
over the past month “but we haven’t yet seen that reflected in hospital
admissions and deaths”.
“I’m cautiously hopeful that while we probably will
expect some sort of wave of hospital admissions over the next few weeks, it
won’t be the same scale that we saw back in January.”
The recent data published by the Public Health
England showed the AstraZeneca vaccine is 92 per cent effective against
hospitalization from the Delta variant after two doses while the Pfizer vaccine
is 96 per cent effective against hospitalization after two doses.
Over 42.4 million people have been given the first
jab of a Coronavirus vaccine while more than 30.8 million people have been
fully vaccinated with a second dose, according to latest official figures.
Experts have warned that Coronavirus may continue
to evolve for years to come, and eventually it is possible that current
vaccines will fail to protect people against transmission, infection, or even
against the disease caused by newer variants.
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