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Covid-19 : The mutation and its effects on the world

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Key points:

Countries around the world - including many in Europe - have imposed restrictions on travellers from the UK
Denmark, Hong Kong, India and Norway become some of the latest places to ban flights from the UK
Sainsbury's says there could be shortages on some fruit and vegetables following France travel ban
Epidemiologist warns new coronavirus strain is 'worst news' and we should 'all be very concerned'
We hope to be in a better position with coronavirus restrictions by Easter, transport secretary tells Sky News
French health minister admits it is 'entirely possible' mutated virus strain could already be circulating in country
UK records 35,928 new coronavirus infections yesterday - the highest ever daily increase
Police say they won't break up rule-breaking Christmas dinners unless there is 'significant health risk'
 
The rapid spread of a new strain of coronavirus is the "worst news" of the pandemic so far, a government scientist has told Sky News.

Britons should be "very concerned" about the mutated strain of COVID-19 that is circulating in London and the South East, Professor Andrew Hayward of the government's New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (NERVTAG) said.

Stressing the importance of how much easier this strain passes from person-to-person, he said: "This is really terrible news in terms of the pandemic.

"If the vaccine is the best news, this is the worst news we've had so far, and we really, really need to tighten down the hatches to stop the spread of this strain while vaccinating as many people as possible."

Follow live COVID updates from the UK and across the world

On Saturday, the new variant - named VUI-202012/01 - saw the prime minister cancel Christmas for millions of people after he was advised it is up to 70% more transmissible.

Professor Hayward, who is director of the Institute of Epidemiology and Healthcare at University College London (UCL), told Sky News that this is because the new strain results in people having a much bigger viral load.

He added that areas that have not yet seen huge caseloads of the new strain are "around three weeks behind" those put into the toughest new Tier 4 restrictions over the weekend.

Asked how the new mutation was able to thrive despite England's nationwide lockdown in November, Professor Hayward said the restrictions were "less intense" and people's attitudes to them were "less stringent".

"Worryingly, even though we had relatively strong measures that were enough to suppress the previous virus, they weren't enough to stop this one," he added.

But he said if the UK is to mitigate "many, many more deaths" as a result of VUI-202012/01, people need to reduce their contacts with others over the Christmas period.

And after a string of countries banned travel to the UK to stop the new strain getting in, Professor Hayward suggested the UK should "take its own action" to close its borders.

He disputed claims the government's action on the new strain has been "too slow", saying his NERVTAG committee first discussed it on 11 December.

"I don't think it's fair to say the government has been slow to act on this. It's more a question of how much further we need to act," he said.

Boris Johnson will chair a meeting of the government's Cobra committee later today to discuss risks of food shortages over the festive period after France banned all freight coming into the UK.
 
The Centre on Monday issued an order to suspend all flights to and from the United Kingdom between December 23 and December 31, joining a host of countries that are also doing so following the discovery of a new variant of the Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes the coronavirus disease (Covid-19), which is believed to spread faster than its previous strains.

The ministry of civil aviation on Monday also noted passengers from all transit flights arriving from UK scheduled to reach India by December 22 will be subjected to mandatory RT-PCR tests on arrival.

Also Read: Delhi CM Kejriwal asks for ban on flights from UK ahead of Centre’s meeting on new coronavirus strain

“Considering the prevailing situation in UK, the government of India has decided that all flights originating from UK to India shall be temporarily suspended till December 31, 2020 (11.59pm). This suspension will start from 11.59pm, December 22, 2020,” the ministry announced.

“As a measure of precaution, passengers arriving from UK in all transit flights (flights that have taken off or flights which are reaching India before December 22) should be subject to mandatory RT-PCR test on arrival at the airports concerned,” it added.


Union civil aviation minister Hardeep Puri said that passengers who test positive will be sent for institutional quarantine.

“Those found positive on arrival should be sent for institutional quarantine set up by state/UT govts, in collaboration with the states/UTs concerned. Those found negative should be advised to isolate at home for 7 days & will be medically monitored by the States/UTs,” he tweeted.

The decision has been taken amid concerns over a new strain of the coronavirus that is feared to be more contagious, which forced at least five countries on Sunday to ban travel from the United Kingdom, with several others considering similar restrictions.

The new coronavirus variant has prompted the UK government to impose a tier 4 lockdown across the country and tighten restrictions across England, especially during the festival season.

India’s announcement on Monday came after a meeting called by the Joint Monitoring Group (JMG) chaired by the Director General of Health Services (DGHS) to assess the threat from the new variant.

The government may review the suspension period after December.

“ We have imposed a 10-day suspension on flights to and from the UK after a thorough review by the government. We will reassess the suspension period as per the situation prevailing in the country later,” an aviation ministry official said.


The development came days after London confirmed that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had accepted India’s invite to be the chief guest at the Republic Day celebrations in New Delhi on January 26. The travel curbs also compound problems for the UK as it is finally set to exit the European Union on December 31.

India has been operating international flights through established transport bubbles with 23 countries, including the UK thus far, and the Vande Bharat Mission since May while regular operations remain suspended since March.


https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...of-covid-19/story-lP48ePZNSvNpCQh4XOOYMI.html
 
It wouldn't surprise me if this mutation/tier 4 malarky was a smokescreen to extend Brexit transition period.
 
This new mutant seems to have spooked every other nation.. flights are getting cancelled by the hour. This can adversely affect the uk economy already reeling from first wave
 
It wouldn't surprise me if this mutation/tier 4 malarky was a smokescreen to extend Brexit transition period.

If to indulge in such theories I want to say to make the anti-vacciners take the vaccine.

Tbf everyone knew it would mutate, it has mutated for the worse with 70% higher transmission rate.. that is the hard part..
 
More than 30 countries have banned UK arrivals because of concerns at the spread of a new variant of coronavirus.

Flights from the UK have been suspended in nations in Europe and across the world including India and Hong Kong.

On Sunday evening, France shut its border with the UK for 48 hours, meaning no lorries or ferries will be able to sail from the port of Dover.

The French government said it will establish a protocol "to ensure movement from the UK can resume".

European Union member states are currently meeting in Brussels to discuss a co-ordinated response.

Boris Johnson is due to chair a meeting of the government's emergency committee and will hold a press conference at Downing Street later.

Eurotunnel services to France are also suspended and Eurostar trains to Belgium are not operating.

But Eurotunnel spokesman John Keefe said he hoped travel from the UK could begin on Wednesday or Thursday.

"We expect it will be something around testing," he told BBC Radio 5 Live.

Other countries to impose a ban on UK arrivals include Belgium, Canada, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Romania, Russia, Spain and Switzerland.

Meanwhile, coronavirus cases in the UK rose by 35,928 on Sunday - nearly double the number recorded seven days previously.

And it was announced that a further 326 people died within 28 days of testing positive, bringing the nation's total to 67,401.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock warned that the new variant of the virus - which may be up to 70% more transmissible - is "getting out of control".

The new variant has spread quickly in London and south-east England, but health officials say there is no evidence that it is more deadly or would react differently to vaccines.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer described the situation as a "real emergency", saying: "The news over the last 24 hours has been deeply disturbing. The number of coronavirus cases has nearly doubled in the last week."

He added: "We can have no more over-promising and false hope, confused messages and slow decision-making. We need strong, clear and decisive leadership."
 
Cases of the new coronavirus strain spreading rapidly in the UK have been confirmed in Denmark, Italy, Gibraltar, the Netherlands and Australia.

France and South Africa also believe they have cases of the mutation - known as VUI-202012/01 - but these have not been confirmed.
 
The sheer incompetence of Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock would put many South Asian politicians to shame. Boris is an utter buffoon.
 
UK has become a laughing stock with nations such as Pakistan banning Brits from entering. If Pakistan a poor nation can control the virus better than Britain, it says a lot for the 'modern' west.

Either this or Brits still dont wash their hands.
 
Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Kuwait have gone into panic mode by closing their airports.....
 
UK government said this mutation is 70% more likely to infect others.

BBC is saying

"There is no clear-cut evidence the new variant of coronavirus - which has been detected in south-east England - is able to transmit more easily, cause more serious symptoms or render the vaccine useless. "

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-55312505

Who is lying here?
 
If to indulge in such theories I want to say to make the anti-vacciners take the vaccine.

Tbf everyone knew it would mutate, it has mutated for the worse with 70% higher transmission rate.. that is the hard part..

The vaccine should still provide protection.

This mutation has come a a really awkward time - Christmas and right at the end of the transition period. Now forty countries have shut their borders to us.

FWIW I would hold the transition up the vaccine is rolled out and we get through the pandemic. Let’s have just one source of massive disruption at a time.
 
BioNTech says can make vaccine for new coronavirus variant detected in UK within 6 weeks

The co-founder of BioNTech said Tuesday it was “highly likely” that its vaccine against the coronavirus works against the mutated strain detected in Britain, but it could also adapt the vaccine if necessary in six weeks.

“Scientifically, it is highly likely that the immune response by this vaccine also can deal with the new virus variant,” said Ugur Sahin.

But if needed, “in principle the beauty of the messenger technology is that we can directly start to engineer a vaccine which completely mimics this new mutation — we could be able to provide a new vaccine technically within six weeks.”

Sahin said the variant detected in Britain has nine mutations, rather than just one as is usually common.

Nevertheless, he voiced confidence that the vaccine developed with Pfizer would be efficient because it “contains more than 1,000 amino acids, and only nine of them have changed, so that means 99 percent of the protein is still the same”.

He said tests are being run on the variant, with results expected in two weeks.

“We have scientific confidence that the vaccine might protect but we will only know it if the experiment is done [...] we will publish the data as soon as possible,” he added.

The World Health Organisation tweeted late on Saturday that it was “in close contact with UK officials on the new #COVID19 virus variant” and promised to update governments and the public as more is learned.

The new strain was identified in southeastern England in September and has been spreading in the area ever since, a WHO official told the BBC on Sunday.

“What we understand is that it does have increased transmissibility, in terms of its ability to spread,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead on Covid-19.

Studies are underway to better understand how fast it spreads and whether “it’s related to the variant itself, or a combination of factors with behaviour,” she added.

She said the strain had also been identified in Denmark, the Netherlands and Australia, where there was one case that didn’t spread further.

“The longer this virus spreads, the more opportunities it has to change,” she said. “So we really need to do everything we can right now to prevent spread.”

Viruses mutate regularly, and scientists have found thousands of different mutations among samples of the virus causing Covid-19. Many of these changes have no effect on how easily the virus spreads or how severe symptoms are.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1597223/b...navirus-variant-detected-in-uk-within-6-weeks
 
KingKhanWC;10996334[B said:
UK government said this mutation is 70% more likely to infect others.[/B]

BBC is saying

"There is no clear-cut evidence the new variant of coronavirus - which has been detected in south-east England - is able to transmit more easily, cause more serious symptoms or render the vaccine useless. "

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-55312505

Who is lying here?
Source? Not another conspiracy theory. Do you remember the crap at start, its 5G causing it etc.
 
Last edited:
Coronavirus: EU tries to agree response to new UK strain

The European Union's 27 member states will try to co-ordinate restrictions on links to the UK, after dozens of countries suspended travel amid alarm over a new coronavirus variant.

So far most of the bloc has acted individually.

France and the UK are trying to reach a deal on ending disruption in the Channel from Wednesday.

The new variant appears to be more transmissible, but there is no sign it is more deadly.

Almost all EU member states are now blocking travellers from the UK.

EU co-ordination talks are continuing in Brussels, and the European Commission is expected to make an announcement later on Tuesday.

Despite those talks, countries are likely to continue with their own policies, the BBC's Gavin Lee reports from Brussels.

More than 1,500 lorries are stuck in Kent in south-east England as UK and French leaders try to reach an agreement on reopening the French border. Some countries, such as Spain, Portugal and Hungary, are only allowing their residents to return home.

The European Commission is set to propose technical recommendations on co-ordinating the flow of goods with the UK. EU ambassadors, meanwhile, will consider travel restrictions.

As the list of countries imposing travel restrictions on the UK grew, the World Health Organization's (WHO) Europe director, Hans Kluge, said member states would convene to discuss strategies and limit travel, while maintaining trade. WHO emergencies chief Mike Ryan said new strains were a normal part of the evolution of a pandemic, and that it was not "out of control", contradicting earlier remarks in the UK from Health Secretary Matt Hancock.

The co-founder of BioNTech, producer with Pfizer of the vaccine now being used in the UK, also voiced optimism. "Scientifically, it is highly likely that the immune response by this vaccine also can deal with the new virus variant," Ugur Sahin said. He added that, if needed, a mutation-beating vaccine could be provided within six weeks.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-55404087
 
Drugmakers rush to test whether vaccines stop coronavirus variant

ZURICH/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Drug makers including BioNTech and Moderna are scrambling to test their COVID-19 vaccines against the new fast-spreading variant of the virus that is raging in Britain, the latest challenge in the breakneck race to curb the pandemic.

Ugur Sahin, chief executive of Germany’s BioNTech, which with partner Pfizer took less than a year to get a vaccine approved, said on Tuesday he needs another two weeks to know if his shot can stop the mutant variant of the virus.

Moderna expects immunity from its vaccine to protect against the variant and is performing more tests in coming weeks to confirm, the company said in a statement to CNN. Moderna did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

The mutation known as the B.1.1.7 lineage may be up to 70% more infectious and more of a concern for children. It has sown chaos in Britain, prompting a wave of travel bans that are disrupting trade with Europe and threatening to further isolate the island country.

Sahin said there are nine mutations on the virus.

While he does not believe any are significant enough to skirt the protection afforded by BioNTech’s mRNA vaccine, which was approved by the European Union on Monday, he said another 14 days or so of study and data collection are needed before offering a definitive answer.

“Scientifically it is highly likely that the immune response by this vaccine can also deal with this virus variant,” he said on a call with reporters.

“The vaccine contains more than 1,270 amino acids, and only 9 of them are changed (in the mutant virus). That means that 99% of the protein is still the same.”

Germany’s CureVac said it does not expect the variant to affect the efficacy of its experimental shot, which is based on the same messenger RNA (mRNA) technology used by Pfizer-BioNTech.

It started late stage clinical trials on its vaccine candidate last week and is constantly reviewing variants, which the company said are common as viruses spread.

Even though there are multiple mutations, BioNTech’s Sahin said, most of the sites on the virus that are recognised by the body’s T-cell response are unchanged, and multiple antibody binding sites are also conserved.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ccines-stop-coronavirus-variant-idUSKBN28W1M8
 
With as many as 20 passengers from the United Kingdom testing positive for Covid-19 at airports in Delhi, Chennai and Kolkata, the state governments have initiated vigorous contract tracking of passengers who came from UK or other European countries in the past 10 days.

At least two people tested positive for Covid-19 in Kolkata after returning from UK, said West Bengal health secretary NS Nigam, state health secretary.

One person has tested positive for Covid-19 out of 24 passengers who returned from the UK to Tamil Nadu, said health secretary J Radhakrishnan. 15 passengers were tested on Monday and another 9 were tested on Tuesday. “We have also identified another 15 people who were in close contact with the positive person as they travelled together by Air India 553 domestic flight,” Radhakrishnan said. “They could have been exposed as they sat in rows adjacent to this (infected) individual. They are already in-home quarantine but we are going to test them too.”

The health department on priority is tracking the health of 1,088 passengers who came from England in the last seven days who are likely to be tested in the next stage. As per government’s SOP data of all international travellers who arrived after November 25 is being collected.

Seven passengers and a crew member who arrived from the UK in an Air India flight tested positive for Covid-19, Punjab minister for medical education and research, OP Soni told reporters, adding that those who tested positive for the infection will be quarantined. Six passengers at Delhi airport coming from the UK were also found positive for Covid-19.

Four passengers including a British national who arrived at Ahmedabad on Tuesday morning by an Air India flight from London tested positive for Covid-19, a city civic official said. Six passengers at Delhi airport coming from UK were also found Covid positive.

The swab samples of the Covid-19 positive passengers have been sent to the National Institute of Virology, Pune, for genomic testing to ascertain if it’s the new strain of the virus. The test reports would come in a few days. The union health ministry officials on Tuesday said that there was no confirmed case of new coronavirus strain in the country.

The British government had warned of a potent new strain of the Covid-19 virus that was ‘out of control’ with 70 per cent more ability to transmit and had imposed a stringent new stay-at-home lockdown from Sunday. India on Monday announced the suspension of all flights to and from the UK between December 23 and December 31 to prevent the arrival of the new Covid-19 strain that is believed to spread the infection faster.

Experts said the possibility of the new strain of the virus having entering India could not be ruled out . The first confirmation of the new strain in the UK came about a week ago.

However, states such as Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Telangana, Chhattisgarh and Kerala have started tracking all passengers who have come from the UK and other European countries in the past 10 days for Covid-19.

Greater Chennai municipal corporation deputy commissioner Meghnathan Reddy said if a UK returnee is found positive, the entire street where they are staying will be tested. “There swab samples will also be sent for genome testing to NIV, Pune,” Radhakrishnan said. Those testing negative will be sent home for 14-day quarantine and positive cases will be referred to hospitals.

Close to 2,000 passengers from the UK arrived at the Chennai airport in the past week. In case of Kolkata, the number is close to 1,500. Some of the passengers did not get RT-PCRT tests done, after which they were tested again.

“At least 222 passengers on a flight came to Kolkata from London early on Sunday. At least 25 passengers, who didn’t have RT-PCR test reports with them at the time of landing were tested in Kolkata. Two of them tested positive and were shifted them to two separate hospitals,” Nigam said.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...ct-tracking/story-joj1TTYiqsfqNJv7dBvefO.html
 
UK Health Sec: Another new variant is in the UK

Hancock now says there are two cases of another new variant in the UK.

Both are contacts of cases who have travelled from South Africa.

"We are incredibly grateful to the South African government for their science," he says.

"This virus is yet more transmissible and appears to have mutated further than the new virus."

He says the UK is quarantining new cases, and placing restrictions on travel from South Africa.

Anyone who has been in South Africa in the past fortnight and anyone who is a close contact of someone who has been in South Africa in the last fortnight must quarantine immediately, he says.
 
No evidence exists to back reports that the new strain of coronavirus in UK has allegedly found its way to Pakistan, Prime Minister Imran Khan's aide on health Dr Faisal Sultan said Thursday.

The premier's aide was responding to a question during a webinar organised by the Pakistan Society for Awareness and Community Empowerment (PACE), where he said that Dr Atta-ur-Rehman had provided no scientific evidence of the new virus variant's existence in the country.

The webinar was moderated by senior health journalist Muhammad Waqar Bhatti, convener PACE, while other panelists were Dr Faisal Mahmood, an infectious diseases expert from Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH), Karachi, Prof Sohail Akhtar, a pulmonologist from Indus Hospital Karachi and Dr Babar Saeed Khan, public and digital health expert and CEO of Ehad Healthcare Karachi.

However, it is pertinent to mention here that Dr Atta, the head of the prime minister’s task-force on science and technology, did not claim that the UK's virus strain was present in the country.

The scientist, speaking in Samaa TV's morning show, had said: "We have found such strains in which there were genetic changes in the spike protein. Some of these are similar to the change seen in UK’s new strain of coronavirus."

Dr Atta further clarified that the changes observed in Pakistan are not located in the same spot on the virus' genetic structure as the UK strain's.

Addressing the webinar further, Dr Sultan said that investigations and research to detect the new strain, dubbed as B117, was underway in a "relevant population where it could possibly be present" in Pakistan.

Dr Faisal Sultan maintained that instead of calling it a new strain that emerged in the UK, it should be considered as a variant of the coronavirus as very minor mutations had been observed in the virus.

“Even British authorities don’t have any strong evidence if the virus has become more infectious”, he said.

When will the vaccine be available in Pakistan?

Responding to a query regarding the availability of the anti-COVID-19 vaccine in Pakistan, Dr Sultan said the first deployment of the vaccine would start in the first quarter of 2021.

The special assistant said that efforts were underway to start vaccinating half a million frontline workers by the end of February to March 2021.

“We have three to four options available regarding vaccines but we are trying to acquire more than one vaccine for our people”, he added.

Dr Sultan said that the COVID-19 vaccine for the general population of Pakistan, between the age group of 18-60 years, would likely to be available in the second or third quarter of 2021, adding that deployment of the vaccine would start in the timeframe of April to June next year.

“We are looking at European, Chinese and even Russian vaccine options but it would be a mix and match for us and we would acquire it from more than one source for our people”, he disclosed.

Reopening of educational institutions
Commenting on the re-opening of educational institutions in January this year, he said he could understand Sindh’s apprehensions regarding the opening of educational institutions as the ratio of positivity is very high at the moment and there is no evidence available of the second wave of COVID-19 slowing down.

The special assistant said that a final decision on whether or not to open educational intuitions from January 11 would be taken in the meeting of provincial and federal health ministers in the first week of January 2021.

'Human behaviour more lethal than the virus'
Meanwhile, AKUH's Dr Faisal Mahmood said almost all the doctors in Pakistan were now seeing repeat infections of coronavirus, adding that he has personally seen 12-15 cases of re-infections at AKUH.

“I would insist that it is the behaviour of humans that is making the coronavirus more lethal, and not the virus itself. If people continue to take precautions, they will remain protected from the virus”, Dr Mahmood added.

Moreover, Prof Sohail Akhtar deplored that all political parties of the country acted indifferently when the pandemic started, adding that people should not wait for the vaccine as it would take time to arrive in Pakistan.

“We should try to live with COVID-19. Precautions, preventive measures and following SOPs should be our first priority”, he added.

KP begins tracking people who arrived from UK
A day earlier, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government started tracking passengers who have arrived in the province from the United Kingdom after a new coronavirus strain was discovered in England.

According to a report by the provincial health department, authorities have sent letters to deputy commissioners that include the names of at least 101 people.

Read more: Britain slapped with coronavirus travel bans due to new strain of virus

The passengers arrived from the United Kingdom and went to 12 districts of the province which include Mardan, Abbottabad, and Swat. "We will test these people after tracing them," the health department officials said.

Those who test positive for the virus will be placed under quarantine, said an official of the health department.

Pakistan updates travel restrictions
Pakistan has updated its standard operating procedures (SOPs) for inbound travelers from the UK, after the emergence of the new virus variant.

The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) announced Tuesday that Pakistani passport holders who have been issued the Business, Visitor or Transit visas by British authorities can return to the country provided they show a negative PCR test.


The test, however, must have been taken 72 hours prior to the start of their travel to Pakistan, said the aviation authority.

The government has also allowed Pakistanis that hold study, family, work and settlement visas in the UK to return to Pakistan "if their visas are expiring within the next 30 days from the issuance of this letter while holding negative PCR Test Reports conducted within the 72 hours prior to commencement of travel to Pakistan".

The new variant
Countries across the globe shut their borders to Britain on Monday due to fears about a new strain of coronavirus, said to be up to 70% more transmissible than the original, causing travel chaos and raising the prospect of food shortages days before Britain is set to leave the European Union.

Read more: Pakistan records lowest coronavirus positivity rate since Nov 7

The discovery of the new strain, just months before vaccines are expected to be widely available, renewed fears about the virus, which killed about 1.7 million people worldwide.

The note of calm from the CEO about the UK mutation echoed the World Health Organization (WHO), which cautioned against major alarm, saying this was a normal part of a pandemic’s evolution.
 
Covid-19: US imposes tests on UK airline passengers

All airline passengers arriving in the US from the UK are to be required to test negative for Covid-19 within 72 hours of departure amid concerns about a new coronavirus variant.

From 28 December travellers will need to provide written documentation of their test result to airlines.

Other countries have shut their borders to UK flights because of the variant.

But its rapid spread has also led to stricter rules in the UK, including a ban on overseas trips for many Britons.

And US airlines have drastically scaled back flying to the UK and Europe, after the entry of most foreign nationals was suspended at the start of the pandemic.

Health officials say there is no evidence the new variant is more deadly, or would react differently to vaccines, but it is proving to be up to 70% more transmissible.

The decision by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to require testing came after New York City introduced quarantine rules for international travellers in response to the variant.

The CDC said passengers must test negative via either a PCR (polymerase chain reaction) or an antigen test.

Since Thursday, passengers travelling with Delta Air Lines and Virgin Atlantic on UK flights to the US have already been required to provide a negative test taken within 72 hours before departure.

United Airlines will introduce similar requirements for passengers travelling from the UK to the US from 28 December.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-55444886
 
France has confirmed the first case in the country of the more contagious coronavirus variant recently identified in the UK.

The French health ministry said the person was a French citizen in the central town of Tours who had arrived from London on 19 December.

The ministry said he was asymptomatic, and currently self-isolating at home.

The appearance of the new coronavirus variant in England triggered travel curbs with dozens of countries.

France closed its border but ended its ban on Wednesday, providing people tested negative before travelling. Thousands of lorry drivers spent Christmas Day in their cabs in Kent waiting to cross the English Channel.
 
Four cases of a coronavirus variant that recently emerged in the United Kingdom and is believed to be particularly infectious, have been confirmed in Madrid, the regional government has said.

All four cases, the first detected in Spain, involved people who recently arrived from the UK, the Madrid regional government’s deputy health chief Antonio Zapatero told a news conference on Saturday.
 
The new variant of Covid-19 is "hugely" more transmissible than the virus's previous version, a study has found.

It concludes the new variant increases the Reproduction or R number by between 0.4 and 0.7.

The UK's latest R number has been estimated at between 1.1 and 1.3. It needs to be below 1.0 for the number of cases to start falling.

Prof Axel Gandy of London's Imperial College said the differences between the viruses types was "quite extreme".

"There is a huge difference in how easily the variant virus spreads," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

The Imperial College study suggests transmission of the new variant tripled during England's November lockdown while the previous version was reduced by a third.

Cases of Covid-19 have begun to increase rapidly during the second spike, and the number of cases recorded in a single day reached a new high on Thursday.

New coronavirus variant: What do we know?

Cases of new variant appear worldwide

Early results indicated that the virus was spreading more quickly among under-20s, particularly among secondary school age children.

But the very latest data indicates that it was spreading quickly across all age groups, according to Prof Gandy who was a member of the research team.

"One possible explanation is that the early data was collected during the time of the November lockdown where schools were open and the activities of the adult population were more restricted. We are seeing now that the new virus has increased infectiousness across all age groups."

Tougher restrictions

Prof Jim Naismith, of Oxford University, said he believed that the new findings indicated that even tougher restrictions would soon be needed.

"The data from Imperial represent the best analysis to date and imply that the measures we have employed to date, would - with the new virus - fail to reduce the R number to below 1.

"In simpler terms, unless we do something different the new virus strain is going to continue to spread, more infections, more hospitalisations and more deaths."

The R number is the average number of people an infected person infects. If it is above 1 the epidemic is growing.



https://www.bbc.com/news/health-55507012
 
The COVID-19 variant that was first identified in the UK may be more deadly than the original virus, the prime minister has warned.

At the Downing Street news conference on Friday, Boris Johnson said: "There is some evidence that the new variant may be associated with a higher degree of mortality."

Mr Johnson added: "All current evidence continues to show that the current vaccines remain effective against the old coronavirus variant and this new one."
 
The statement was actually that it's possible that the new variant may be up to 70% more transmissible but there's considerable uncertainty.

Email Boris, he said it.

Source? Not another conspiracy theory. Do you remember the crap at start, its 5G causing it etc.

Please try reading the news more often.

The new strain of coronavirus identified in England is up to 70 per cent more transmissible, prime minister Boris Johnson has said, as the government announced further restrictions to curb the rapid spread of the mutated virus.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/coronavirus-strain-covid-transmission-b1776581.html

Here is the lasest from the pandemic boss.

Dr. Fauci says new data shows Covid vaccines appear to be less effective against some new strains

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/01/21/dr-...-less-effective-against-some-new-strains.html
 
The new types of vaccines created allow for easier adaptation to newer strains, should they be more resistant to current vaccines.

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/30/cov...-future-strains-can-be-protected-against.html

And the Pfizer vaccine has been shown to work well with the newer UK strain without any amendments.

https://www.pfizer.com/news/press-r...and-biontech-puresults-study-showing-covid-19

Don't listen to the science deniers on this forum who desperately want to find any fault with the vaccines to confirm their (anti-science) bias.
 
A total of 600 people in the UK have now contracted the South African coronavirus variant, new figures show.

An extra 56 cases were reported this week and although Public Health England (PHE) has not provided a geographical breakdown of where these are specifically, but does say 524 are in England.

In the past few days, three large boroughs of London have been the spotlight of COVID surge testing.

Health officials tested around 650,000 people and it was reported "dozens" of cases of the South African variant were found in Wandsworth and Lambeth.

One study out of South Africa has found that it is about 50% more infectious than previous variants
The figures released today would not have included any instances of the variant found in the surge testing - as it takes a few days for results to be confirmed.

The news comes as a coronavirus variant with a "double mutation" was detected in the UK after having first emerged in India.

A total of 77 cases of the variant, known as B.1.617, have been found across the country in the days leading up to 14 April, the latest update from PHE revealed.

The strain is of particular concern because it features two mutations in the spike protein combined in the same virus, prompting fears it may be more infectious or less susceptible to vaccines.

It has been classified as a "variant under investigation".

Paul Hunter, professor in medicine at the University of East Anglia, said the discovery could be cause for significant concern.

"These two escape mutations working together could be a lot more problematic than the South African and Brazilian variants who have only got one escape mutation," he told The Guardian.

"It might be even less controlled by vaccine than the Brazilian and South African variants."

India reported a daily increase of 217,353 infections over the last 24 hours, the country's second record in consecutive days.

SKY
 
UK has become a laughing stock with nations such as Pakistan banning Brits from entering. If Pakistan a poor nation can control the virus better than Britain, it says a lot for the 'modern' west.

Either this or Brits still dont wash their hands.

so Pakistan failed to control, so you stil gona say your modern west failed?
 
so Pakistan failed to control, so you stil gona say your modern west failed?

PakistanPakistan
Total cases
745K
+5,364
Recovered
651K
+4,123
Deaths
15,982

+110



UK
Total cases
4.38M
+2,671
Recovered
-

Deaths
127K

+30

Pakistan is 3 x the population of the UK but has 15k deaths compared to 127k.

What are you talking about?
 
PakistanPakistan
Total cases
745K
+5,364
Recovered
651K
+4,123
Deaths
15,982

+110



UK
Total cases
4.38M
+2,671
Recovered
-

Deaths
127K

+30

Pakistan is 3 x the population of the UK but has 15k deaths compared to 127k.

What are you talking about?

and as usual, you are those people who google stats and post them on forum.

But have no clue about ground realities.

I know people here who have covid symptoms, but do not tell others as they don't want to banished or be forced to quarantine themselves.
I know people who dont want to spend money on test and just bare with the symptoms they have got.

But than again, you don't live in this country and have no idea what is happening
 
and as usual, you are those people who google stats and post them on forum.

But have no clue about ground realities.

I know people here who have covid symptoms, but do not tell others as they don't want to banished or be forced to quarantine themselves.
I know people who dont want to spend money on test and just bare with the symptoms they have got.

But than again, you don't live in this country and have no idea what is happening

Its a virus that cant be controlled without an intelligent population, lots of luck and a govt willing to spend 100s of billions of £ or $. IA people stay safe but as Ind cases have shown, you hope for the best and take all possible precautions.
 
The Indian coronavirus mutation could "scupper" the UK's march to freedom, a leading scientist has warned.

It comes despite the lockdown and vaccine programme leading to cases falling to a seven-month low.

COVID-19 infections across the UK dropped to the lowest level since the autumn, according to the latest figures.

But a professor of immunology has said the country should be on its guard against a third wave of coronavirus after 77 cases of the B.1.617 variant, which was first discovered in India, were found.

Imperial College's Danny Altmann said the discovery of the Indian variant should warrant the country being placed on the UK's "red list" meaning incoming travellers arriving should be subject to a hotel quarantine.

However, officials have designated it as a variant under investigation (VUI) rather than a variant of concern.

And Downing Street has insisted Boris Johnson's trip to India later this month - his first major international visit since securing a Brexit trade deal with Brussels - will go ahead.

"I think we should be terribly concerned about it," Prof Altmann told BBC News.

"They (variants of concern) are things that can most scupper our escape plan at the moment and give us a third wave. They are a worry."

Prof Altmann said he found it "mystifying" and "slightly confounding" that those flying in from India were not required to quarantine in a hotel.

Meanwhile, the group advising ministers on vaccine deployment has recommended that pregnant women should be offered a COVID-19 jab at the same time as the rest of the population.

The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) had previously only recommended that jabs be offered to pregnant women when their risk of exposure to the virus is high, such as health workers, or if a woman has underlying health conditions.

The development coincided with a continuing decline in coronavirus infections across Britain.

But the fall marked a contrast to rising case rates in other parts of the world.

World Health Organisation (WHO) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said coronavirus rates globally were "worrying", as India recorded more than 217,000 daily cases on Friday, pushing its total since the pandemic began past 14.2 million.

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19...onavirus-lockdown-rules-warns-expert-12277830
 
Drove past a surge testing centre yesterday.
It for the Indian variant.

Seems strange that so many flights still coming into the UK from India and no one has to quarantine in a hotel for 14 days.
 
The Indian coronavirus mutation could "scupper" the UK's march to freedom, a leading scientist has warned.

It comes despite the lockdown and vaccine programme leading to cases falling to a seven-month low.

COVID-19 infections across the UK dropped to the lowest level since the autumn, according to the latest figures.

But a professor of immunology has said the country should be on its guard against a third wave of coronavirus after 77 cases of the B.1.617 variant, which was first discovered in India, were found.

Imperial College's Danny Altmann said the discovery of the Indian variant should warrant the country being placed on the UK's "red list" meaning incoming travellers arriving should be subject to a hotel quarantine.

However, officials have designated it as a variant under investigation (VUI) rather than a variant of concern.

And Downing Street has insisted Boris Johnson's trip to India later this month - his first major international visit since securing a Brexit trade deal with Brussels - will go ahead.

"I think we should be terribly concerned about it," Prof Altmann told BBC News.

"They (variants of concern) are things that can most scupper our escape plan at the moment and give us a third wave. They are a worry."

Prof Altmann said he found it "mystifying" and "slightly confounding" that those flying in from India were not required to quarantine in a hotel.

Meanwhile, the group advising ministers on vaccine deployment has recommended that pregnant women should be offered a COVID-19 jab at the same time as the rest of the population.

The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) had previously only recommended that jabs be offered to pregnant women when their risk of exposure to the virus is high, such as health workers, or if a woman has underlying health conditions.

The development coincided with a continuing decline in coronavirus infections across Britain.

But the fall marked a contrast to rising case rates in other parts of the world.

World Health Organisation (WHO) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said coronavirus rates globally were "worrying", as India recorded more than 217,000 daily cases on Friday, pushing its total since the pandemic began past 14.2 million.

https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19...onavirus-lockdown-rules-warns-expert-12277830

When you have the Chancellor and Home Secretary of Ind origins, then a decision to strict travel won't be easy. Sooner or later they won't have a choice
 
When you have the Chancellor and Home Secretary of Ind origins, then a decision to strict travel won't be easy. Sooner or later they won't have a choice

It's all political and I'm afraid Brexit has made it double difficult.
 
and as usual, you are those people who google stats and post them on forum.

But have no clue about ground realities.

I know people here who have covid symptoms, but do not tell others as they don't want to banished or be forced to quarantine themselves.
I know people who dont want to spend money on test and just bare with the symptoms they have got.

But than again, you don't live in this country and have no idea what is happening

Pakistan is a huge country, you cannot possibly know everyone or people from all areas.

We can only go by statistics when it comes to a pandemic. Looking at these its clear Pakistan has performed far better than a 1st country, one of the richest in the world(UK). I can go into detail how the UK government has totally made a mess of this pandemic but number of deaths per population is enough.
 
Pakistan is a huge country, you cannot possibly know everyone or people from all areas.

We can only go by statistics when it comes to a pandemic. Looking at these its clear Pakistan has performed far better than a 1st country, one of the richest in the world(UK). I can go into detail how the UK government has totally made a mess of this pandemic but number of deaths per population is enough.

When it comes to China, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, for one reason or another, you cannot believe the stats fed to you. They are all skewed or bogus.
 
When it comes to China, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, for one reason or another, you cannot believe the stats fed to you. They are all skewed or bogus.

True. Many with milder symptoms doesn’t go for testing at all because of the fear of discrimination and isolation from Society. And also there is manipulation by the government on covid numbers to protect their interests.
 
Drove past a surge testing centre yesterday.
It for the Indian variant.

Seems strange that so many flights still coming into the UK from India and no one has to quarantine in a hotel for 14 days.

India should be on the Red List. More incompetence from this useless British government.
 
Pakistan is a huge country, you cannot possibly know everyone or people from all areas.

We can only go by statistics when it comes to a pandemic. Looking at these its clear Pakistan has performed far better than a 1st country, one of the richest in the world(UK). I can go into detail how the UK government has totally made a mess of this pandemic but number of deaths per population is enough.
The statistics are flawed. The stats are only considering the rich and rational people of our society who actually got themselves tested.

My grandparents family, everyone has fever, but they are soo dumb they wont get tested. There are many more examples like them in our society.

Pakistan has not performed better, no way it has. The virus is spreading. No one wears masks here.
 
Its a virus that cant be controlled without an intelligent population, lots of luck and a govt willing to spend 100s of billions of £ or $. IA people stay safe but as Ind cases have shown, you hope for the best and take all possible precautions.

If the population is not intelligent, than you need an intelligent govt to stop the spread.

Simple procedure, place fines on the population for not wearing masks or for public gatherings. WHen you place fines, everyone will be following the sops.

The mask is infact back at market rate which is Rs.5, same rate that existed before covid.

Govt could infact place maximum price law aswell on the masks.

Govt could actually increase its revenue this way.


Problem is, govt has no idea how to enforce laws. Govt doesnt even know its own powers and cares less.
 
I never believe the Covid infected statistics because so many people just don't get tested for fear of ostracization. The Death tolls are reveal better about the Covid impact
However case with mutation is that death tolls % to infected also varies with each mutant
 
If the population is not intelligent, than you need an intelligent govt to stop the spread.

Simple procedure, place fines on the population for not wearing masks or for public gatherings. WHen you place fines, everyone will be following the sops.

The mask is infact back at market rate which is Rs.5, same rate that existed before covid.

Govt could infact place maximum price law aswell on the masks.

Govt could actually increase its revenue this way.


Problem is, govt has no idea how to enforce laws. Govt doesnt even know its own powers and cares less.

Masks no doubt help but as experience from the World shows you can't control the virus unless you lock down, something The PK population can't afford.
 
Masks no doubt help but as experience from the World shows you can't control the virus unless you lock down, something The PK population can't afford.

Unfortunately there is no easy solution for countries like UK, India, USA or Pakistan. People live free (as in free to do what they please). We have all kinds of protests and everything soon turns political even if it was not.
 
Masks no doubt help but as experience from the World shows you can't control the virus unless you lock down, something The PK population can't afford.

its not about controlling, its about limitting the spread. The spread of covid could had been limitted in Pakistan.

And trust me, had we placed proper border controls, we could had achieved NZ like numbers. Once you control the borders, you dont need a lockdown in your country.

Dont enforce Lockdown, but atleast enforce masks and SOPs. Govt has to enforce them, people are not going to just folllow rules as good Samaritans.

Some institutes can operate with total lockdown. Like oru education system was operating fine and needed some more involvment of admin and teachers. But we had sitautions where govt decided to open schools and uni for a week and two which only increased the spread.
 
Unfortunately there is no easy solution for countries like UK, India, USA or Pakistan. People live free (as in free to do what they please). We have all kinds of protests and everything soon turns political even if it was not.

easy solution for implementing SOPS is simple.

Place a Rs. 1000 fine on general population for violating SOPs. I could bet top dollar here that everyone would start following SOPs.

These same Pakistanis that violate SOPS and call Covid a sazish cant dare to do so in Middle east due to heavy fines.
 
India needs to be slapped on the UK red list asap! It's an impending disaster, wake up you incompetent Tory fools!
 
its not about controlling, its about limitting the spread. The spread of covid could had been limitted in Pakistan.

And trust me, had we placed proper border controls, we could had achieved NZ like numbers. Once you control the borders, you dont need a lockdown in your country.

Dont enforce Lockdown, but atleast enforce masks and SOPs. Govt has to enforce them, people are not going to just folllow rules as good Samaritans.

Some institutes can operate with total lockdown. Like oru education system was operating fine and needed some more involvment of admin and teachers. But we had sitautions where govt decided to open schools and uni for a week and two which only increased the spread.

NZ has a population of 5mn, its in the middle of nowhere. PK is lucky that the death rate is still very low but as the experience of others( including our neighbours) has shown, you live in cloud cuckoo land, if we with our limited resources have any chance to control the spread. IA the death rate stays low and we begin to get closer to herd immunity.
 
NZ has a population of 5mn, its in the middle of nowhere. PK is lucky that the death rate is still very low but as the experience of others( including our neighbours) has shown, you live in cloud cuckoo land, if we with our limited resources have any chance to control the spread. IA the death rate stays low and we begin to get closer to herd immunity.

you just dont want to accept that it could be limited.

All Pakistan had to do was control the borders, thats it. We allowed every idiot to come in. ANd once they came in, no one cared whether you had covid or not.

making the awam force SOPS would had helped alot. Intially, during the intial 2-3 months of covid, everyone was folowing SOPS as govt was placing heavy fines on shop keepers who in return forced peope to follow SOPS in theri shops atleast. And to some extent it worked.
 
you just dont want to accept that it could be limited.

All Pakistan had to do was control the borders, thats it. We allowed every idiot to come in. ANd once they came in, no one cared whether you had covid or not.

making the awam force SOPS would had helped alot. Intially, during the intial 2-3 months of covid, everyone was folowing SOPS as govt was placing heavy fines on shop keepers who in return forced peope to follow SOPS in theri shops atleast. And to some extent it worked.

In an open world are you go to stop PKs from coming back home?
 
When it comes to China, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, for one reason or another, you cannot believe the stats fed to you. They are all skewed or bogus.

The statistics are flawed. The stats are only considering the rich and rational people of our society who actually got themselves tested.

My grandparents family, everyone has fever, but they are soo dumb they wont get tested. There are many more examples like them in our society.

Pakistan has not performed better, no way it has. The virus is spreading. No one wears masks here.

The western nations are just as corrupt and just as incompetant.

PCR tests are not accurate, there are so many false positives across the world.

Pakistan is a warmer nation and most people live a clean life esp in the villages. Here in the UK 24hr adverts run teaching people how to wash hands lol.

Relatives feeling unwell is no indicator of anything lol.

Its all conjecture, so we can only go on the official stats, UK along with US are amongst the two worst nations on Earth in how they have dealth with this.

Some hate IK so will always criticise but there is no argument for any intellgent person to suggest Pak has done worse than UK and Yanks.
 
My family know what I believe, you cant say the same. Show them some respect but you'd rather cry on the internet.

Unless you are a doctor in a circus, which seems to be the case, hygiene of course plays a role. British is the key, not Pakistanis as Pakistan has a far lower infection and death rate compared to the UK. Educate yourself instead of being a doctor with a red nose & a horn.

What happens in a village in Sindh has nothing to do with British-Pakistanis and their alleged hygiene.
 
In an open world are you go to stop PKs from coming back home?

Yes. Offcourse.

This coming back home is what creatws problems for us. People dont want to take their precautions and than end it up spreading it in the population.
.
Should jad not allwoed free movement of people in to the country. Or atleast force them to stay in hotwls can get tested 3 times before releasing them. This way with jacked up travel prices no one would had come.

Intially, they should had banned people coming in from Iran and china.
 
The western nations are just as corrupt and just as incompetant.

PCR tests are not accurate, there are so many false positives across the world.

Pakistan is a warmer nation and most people live a clean life esp in the villages. Here in the UK 24hr adverts run teaching people how to wash hands lol.

Relatives feeling unwell is no indicator of anything lol.

Its all conjecture, so we can only go on the official stats, UK along with US are amongst the two worst nations on Earth in how they have dealth with this.

Some hate IK so will always criticise but there is no argument for any intellgent person to suggest Pak has done worse than UK and Yanks.

You really have no idea about pakistan and are now just making stuff up.

People here cough on ur face. No one respects privatw space.

Im telling you the ground realities. My grand mothers family has 7 people with fever but they are not getting themselves tested.

You may now claim they are disgusting people as they dont live in clean environment.

You cam have 10 percent false postive, but there is a difference between false postive and getting covid tested.
 
Perhaps in your family this is the case.

Most Muslims are far more hygenic as they wash their hands reguarly and also do wudhu before prayer.

I know an uncle who prays five timea aday and got covid.

You really are not making sense. You can be as hygenic you wamt, but rhe moment you talk to someone and the virus traveks in the air into your breath, you are done.

You coukd be in wuzu or do wuzu after 45 minsz but once the virus has entered ur breath you are done for.
 
India's Double Mutant Jumps To 10 Countries. All You Need To Know

The new variant, which has a so-called double mutation, is thought to be fueling India's deadlier new wave of cases that has made it the world's second worst-hit country, surpassing Brazil again, and has already begun to overwhelm its hospitals and crematoriums.

With India's daily tally of Covid-19 infections surging by records, public health experts worry that a new -- possibly more virulent -- coronavirus variant could be racing through the crowded nation of more than 1.3 billion people.
The new variant, which has a so-called double mutation, is thought to be fueling India's deadlier new wave of cases that has made it the world's second worst-hit country, surpassing Brazil again, and has already begun to overwhelm its hospitals and crematoriums. India has reported more than 14.5 million Covid cases so far and more than 175,600 fatalities.

"This is a variant of interest we are following," Maria Van Kerkhove, the World Health Organization's technical lead officer on Covid, told reporters Friday. "Having two of these mutations, which have been seen in other variants around the world, are concerning," she said, adding that there was a similarity with mutations that increase transmission as well as reduce neutralization, possibly stunting the ability of vaccines to curb them.

The new strain underscores the insidious nature of viruses and threatens to thwart containment efforts in India, despite measures such as the world's largest lockdown last year. An exploding outbreak in India risks undoing a hard-won victory over the pathogen for others, too, especially as this strain has now jumped to at least 10 other countries.

Here's what we know so far:

How did the "double mutation" variant emerge?
The new variant, called B.1.617, was initially detected in India with two mutations -- the E484Q and L452R. It was first reported late last year by a scientist in India and more details were presented before the WHO on Monday, according to Van Kerkhove.

Viruses mutate all the time, as part of evolutionary biology. Some mutations weaken the virus while others may make it stronger, enabling it to proliferate faster or cause more infections.

India's health ministry first acknowledged the presence of a "double mutant" at the end of March, but has downplayed it since. While it's a variant of interest, it "has not been stamped as a 'variant of concern' so as to say that it is more lethal or more infectious," Aparna Mukherjee, a scientist at the Indian Council of Medical Research, which works under the nation's health ministry, told Bloomberg TV on Friday.

The double mutation has been found in several countries like Australia, Belgium, Germany, Ireland, Namibia, New Zealand, Singapore, the U.K. and the U.S., according to an April 16 statement from the Indian government. "Higher transmissibility of this variant is not established as yet," it said.

Is it causing the record surge in infections in India?

Genome sequencing indicates the variant as a possible culprit, although the Indian government hasn't confirmed it.

The average prevalence of the variant surged to as high as 52% of samples sequenced in April from almost nothing in January, according to website tracker outbreak.info, which uses data from global repository GISAID.

In some districts in Maharashtra state -- home to Mumbai and epicenter of the current wave that's triggered fresh lockdown-like rules -- the prevalence of this variant was more than 60%, according to Anurag Agrawal, director of the state-run Council of Scientific and Industrial Research's genomics institute that's conducting sequencing. The B.1.617 was present in samples from about 10 Indian states and while the percentage may vary, it was expected to rise as "it has two critical mutations that make it more likely to transmit and escape prior immunity," Mr Agrawal said.

Both mutations are known to decrease -- although not completely eliminate -- the binding of the antibodies created by infection and vaccination, according to Jesse Bloom, an associate professor for genome sciences and microbiology at the University of Washington.

"Mutations at sites E484 and L452 have been observed separately, but this is the first major viral lineage that combines the two," said Bloom. "I do think that this new viral variant is important to monitor."

"We did the math -- we do believe that a lot of the increase in the reproduction number can be explained by these mutations," Nithya Balasubramanian, the head of health-care research at Bernstein India, told Bloomberg TV this week. "So, yes, the mutations are a big cause for worry."

After being complacent in mapping virus genomes in recent months -- India did sequencing for less than 1% positive samples as of last month -- the country is now scrambling to cover lost ground. "We are attempting to do at least 5% of whatever samples are there," said ICMR's Mr Mukherjee.

"It looks like that it is spreading faster than pre-existing variants," said Rakesh Mishra, the Hyderabad-based director of the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology -- another Indian lab doing genome sequencing of Covid samples. "Sooner or later, it will become prevalent in the whole country, given the way it is spreading."

Has it been found outside India?
This variant has been detected in at least 10 other countries, including the U.S., the U.K., Australia and New Zealand, according to the situation report on outbreak.info.

As of April 16, 408 sequences in the B.1.617 lineage have been detected of which 265 were found in India, the report shows. A surveillance report by the U.K. government said it has found 77 cases in England and Scotland so far, designating it as a "Variant Under Investigation."

New Zealand has temporarily suspended arrivals of its citizens and residents from India due to the spike in the number returning with Covid. Brazil was also shunned as a Covid superspreader by its neighbors who were nervous about the virus strain next door.

India's second wave -- given its size and rapid pace -- will worry other nations that have just about managed their own outbreaks after weeks of economy-devastating lockdowns.

Is it deadlier than other variants out there?
Researchers are still trying to figure that out. The features of the double mutant variant are under investigation, but the L452R mutation is well characterized in U.S studies, according to Agrawal. It increases viral transmission by around 20% and reduces antibody efficacy by more than 50%, he said.

Globally, three worrisome variants that have so far emerged in the U.K., South Africa and Brazil have caused particular concern. Studies suggest they are more contagious, and some evidence points to one of them being more deadly while another drives reinfections.

This double mutant strain, first found in India, has begun troubling virologists everywhere.

"The B.1.617 variant has all the hallmarks of a very dangerous virus," William A. Haseltine, a former professor at Harvard Medical School wrote in Forbes on April 12. "We must do all that is possible to identify its spread and to contain it."

Do vaccines work against it?
It's hard to know for sure without adequate data and research. India is testing whether the new variants, including the B.1.617, are capable of "immune escape or not," according to ICMR's Mukherjee.

Immune escape refers to a pathogen's ability to evade human bodies' immunity response. This means antibodies created after vaccination or prior infection may not protect a person from getting infected. If the new India variant shows "immune escape" behavior, this would have deep ramifications for India's vaccination program, which has picked up after a sluggish start and administered almost 120 million doses so far.

India has currently authorized three vaccines. Two of them are already in use while the third, Russia's Sputnik V, was approved this week. India also fast-tracked approval for foreign vaccines this week. All of these efforts risk being jeopardized if the shots turn out to be less effective against this double mutation variant.

"It is one of the ones that's on our radar, and in doing so, it means it's on the radar of people around the world," said Van Kerkhove.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/indias-double-mutation-jumps-to-10-countries-all-you-need-to-know-2416734
 
India must be red listed on an urgent basis or else we will be back in to lockdown deaths spiralling out of control.

Hong Kong have stopped flights from India and the rest of the world must do so quickly. I only hope its not too late.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israel-logs-indian-covid-19-variant-sees-some-vaccine-efficacy-against-it-2021-04-20/

Israel has registered eight cases of a coronavirus variant first identified in India and believes that the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine is at least partially effective against it, an Israeli health official said on Tuesday.

An initial seven cases of the Indian variant were detected in Israel last week among people arriving from abroad and who have since undergone preliminary testing, the Health Ministry said.

"The impression is that the Pfizer vaccine has efficacy against it, albeit a reduced efficacy," the ministry's director-general, Hezi Levy, told Kan public radio, saying the number of cases of the variant in Israel now stood at eight.

The ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for more details on the research into the Indian variant.

The novel variant, designated B.1.617, was reported by India's health ministry in late March. It contains an E484K mutation, which has been associated with immune escape by other variants, and another mutation known as L425R, which may increase its transmissibility.

Britain and Ireland have also said they are investigating the variant after detecting it within their borders.

Israel, whose population is 9.3 million, has fully vaccinated around 81% of citizens or residents over the age of 16. COVID-19 infections and hospitalisations are down sharply.
 
What is the India variant?

Viruses mutate all the time, producing different versions or variants of themselves.

Most of these mutations are insignificant - and some may even make the virus less dangerous - but others can make it more contagious and harder to vaccinate against.

This variant - officially known as B1617 - was first detected in India in October.

How far has it spread?

Sample testing is not widespread enough across India to determine how far or quickly the variant is spreading.

It was detected in 220 out of 361 Covid samples collected between January and March in the western Indian state of Maharashtra.

Meanwhile, it has been spotted in at least 21 countries, according to the GISAID global database.

International travel appears to have brought the variant to the UK, where 103 cases have been identified since 22 February.

Most travellers from India have now been banned from coming to the UK.

And Public Health England has listed the India variant as one of several "variants under investigation" but does not so far consider it serious enough to be classified as a "variant of concern".

Is it more infectious or dangerous?

Scientists do not yet know whether this variant is more infectious or resistant to vaccines.

Dr Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at Louisiana State University, says one of its mutations is similar to those seen in variants identified in South Africa and Brazil.

And this mutation may help the virus evade antibodies in the immune system that can fight coronavirus based on experience from prior infection or a vaccine.

But what appears to be more worrying at the moment is a variant identified in the UK, which is dominant in Britain and has spread to more than 50 countries.

"I doubt whether the Indian variant is more infectious than the UK variant - and we must not panic," Dr Kamil says.

Why is so little known about it?
Much of the data around the India variant is incomplete, scientists say, with very few samples being shared - 298 in India and 656 worldwide, compared with more than 384,000 sequences of the UK variant.

And after the first recorded cases in India, fewer than 400 cases of the variant have been detected worldwide, Dr Kamil says.

India has been reporting about 200,000 Covid cases daily since 15 April - well beyond its peak of 93,000 cases a day last year.

Deaths too have been rising.

"India's high population and density is a perfect incubator for this virus to experiment with mutations," says Ravi Gupta, a professor of clinical microbiology at the University of Cambridge.

However, the wave of cases in India could have been caused by large gatherings, and lack of preventive measures such as mask-wearing or social distancing.

Dr Jeffrey Barrett, from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, says it is possible there could also be a cause-and-effect relationship with the new variant, but there is still a lack of evidence.

He points out that the India variant has been around since late last year: "If it is driving the wave in India it has taken several months to get to this point which would suggest it's probably less transmissible than the Kent B117 variant."

Scientists believe existing vaccines will help control the variant when it comes to preventing severe disease.

Some variants will inevitably escape the current vaccines, according to a paper published in Nature by Prof Gupta and his fellow researchers. As a result, changes to vaccine design will be needed to make them more effective.

However, the vaccinations now available are still likely to slow down the spread of the disease.

"For most people, these vaccines can mean the difference between little to no disease and ending up in the hospital with a risk of dying," says Dr Kamil.

"Please take the first vaccine you are offered. Do not make the mistake of hesitating and waiting for an ideal vaccine."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-56844925
 
UK scientists find evidence of human-to-cat Covid transmission

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/apr/23/uk-scientists-find-evidence-of-human-to-cat-covid-transmission

Two cases of human-to-cat transmission of Covid-19 have been identified by researchers. Scientists from the University of Glasgow found the cases of Sars-CoV-2 transmission as part of a screening programme of the feline population in the UK.

The cats, of different breeds, were living in separate households and displayed mild to severe respiratory signs. Researchers believe both pets were infected by their owners, who had Covid-19 symptoms before the cats became unwell.

The study, published in the Veterinary Record, says there is no evidence of cat-to-human transmission or that cats, dogs or other domestic animals play any appreciable role in the epidemiology of human Covid infections.

But the scientists said domestic animals could act as a “viral reservoir”, allowing continued transmission, and said it was important to improve understanding of whether pets can play a role in infecting humans.

Prof Margaret Hosie, from the MRC-University of Glasgow’s centre for virus research and lead author of the study, said: “These two cases of human-to-animal transmission, found in the feline population in the UK, demonstrate why it is important that we improve our understanding of animal Sars-CoV-2 infection.

“Currently, animal-to-human transmission represents a relatively low risk to public health in areas where human-to-human transmission remains high. However, as human cases decrease, the prospect of transmission among animals becomes increasingly important as a potential source of Sars-CoV-2 reintroduction to humans.

“It is therefore important to improve our understanding of whether exposed animals could play any role in transmission.”

Researchers at the centre worked in partnership with the Veterinary Diagnostic Service (VDS) at the university’s School of Veterinary Medicine on the study.

The first cat was a four-month-old female Ragdoll kitten from a household in which the owner developed symptoms that were consistent with Sars-CoV-2 infection at the end of March 2020, although they were not tested.

The kitten was taken to a vet with breathing difficulties in April 2020 but its condition deteriorated and it had to be put down. Postmortem lung samples revealed damage consistent with a viral pneumonia and there was evidence of Sars-CoV-2 infection.

The second cat was a six-year-old female Siamese from a household where one owner tested positive for Covid-19. The cat was taken to the vet with nasal discharge and conjunctivitis, but its symptoms remained mild and the cat later recovered.

Covid-19 infection was confirmed in a retrospective survey of swabs submitted to VDS between March and July 2020 for routine pathogen testing.

Scientists believe the two cases are likely to underestimate the true frequency of human-to-animal transmission, as animal testing is limited.
 
Sindh Health Minister Dr Azra Pechuho informed on Monday that the South African and Brazilian variants of the novel coronavirus disease have been found in samples taken by the Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH).

In a video message posted on the Sindh Health and Population Welfare Department's official Twitter account, the provincial health minister disclosed that the AKUH collected 13 samples to perform genomic study confirming the variants of the virus.

She added that out of these samples, 10 were of the UK variant, two of the South African variant while the other was found to be of the Brazilian variant.

Dr Pechuho said that these strands of Covid-19 have the potential to bring the current healthcare facilities to the brink of collapse.

She warned that the UK variant was more lethal and spread more rapidly, with around 60% infectivity rate and nearly 68% fatality rate once infected. The health minister added that the fatality rate for the South African and Brazilian strands was also high.

“This is an emergency as these variants are not vaccine responsive either,” Dr Pechuho claimed.

The health minister further added that the current vaccines being administered across the country may be effective against Covid-19 but are useless when it comes to these variants.“Therefore it is important for everyone to take all necessary precautions & take this seriously,” Dr Pechuho asserted.

According to the Sindh health department's tweet, "Dr Pechuho strongly recommended avoiding crowds & even small social gatherings, as well as travelling unncessarily."

She warned that if the necessary precautions were not taken, the country could face a humanitarian crisis like that of India.

Earlier on Wednesday, the provincial health officials confirmed the UK variant of coronavirus, which is fuelling the ongoing third wave of Covid-19 in Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkwa provinces, reaching Sindh.

Pechuho said that a genomic study conducted in Karachi had 50 samples confirming the UK variant of the virus. “This virus has reached Karachi now too,” she disclosed in a video message to the public.

Health Department spokesperson Mehar Khursheed said that the samples taken from the passengers coming to Karachi through domestic and international flights had 50% ratio of the UK variant. However, he added: “This is not overall ratio of [all] the positive cases in the province.”
 
Indian scientists flag coronavirus mutations that could 'evade immune response'

Scientists are studying what led to the current surge in cases in India and particularly whether a variant first detected in the country, called B.1.617, is to blame.

A forum of scientific advisers set up by the Indian government has told authorities about minor mutations in some samples of the coronavirus that could "possibly evade immune response" and require more study, a leader of the forum has told Reuters.

However the advisers said while they were flagging the mutations, there was no reason currently to believe they were expanding or could be dangerous.

Scientists are studying what led to the current surge in cases in India and particularly whether a variant first detected in the country, called B.1.617, is to blame. The World Health Organization has not declared the Indian variant a "variant of concern," as it has done for variants first detected in Britain, Brazil and South Africa. But the WHO said on April 27 that its early modelling, based on genome sequencing, suggested that B.1.617 had a higher growth rate than other variants circulating in India.

The forum of advisers, known as the Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genetics Consortium, or INSACOG, has now found more mutations in the coronavirus that it thinks need to be tracked closely.

"We are seeing some mutation coming up in some samples that could possibly evade immune responses," said Shahid Jameel, chair of the scientific advisory group of INSACOG and a top Indian virologist. He did not say if the mutations have been seen in the Indian variant or any other strain.

"Unless you culture those viruses and test them in the lab, you can't say for sure. At this point, there is no reason to believe that they are expanding or if they can be dangerous, but we flagged it so that we keep our eye on the ball," he said.

India reported more than 400,000 new Covid-19 cases for the first time on Saturday. The rampaging infections have collapsed its health system in places including capital New Delhi, with shortages of medical oxygen and hospital beds.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/indian-scientists-flag-coronavirus-mutations-that-could-evade-immune-response-101619869932182.html
 
India variant found in Malaysia

A variant of the coronavirus first identified in India has been discovered in Malaysia, according to the country's health minister.

The B.1.617 variant was found found in an Indian national who was screened at Kuala Lumpur International Airport.

The virus is described as a "variant of interest" by the World Health Organisation, suggesting it may have mutations that would make the virus more transmissible, cause more severe disease or evade vaccine immunity.

"We advise the public to remain calm... All public health efforts will continue in order to break the chain of infection and ensure public safety," Health Minister Adham Baba said.

He did not say when the variant was detected.

Malaysia, which is facing rising coronavirus cases, banned flights from India on Wednesday.

The southeast Asian country reported 3,418 new coronavirus cases on Sunday, bringing its total number of infections to 415,012 cases, including more than 1,500 deaths.
 
Apparently, the vaccines in USA may not be effective against the Indian variant




Folks in India, sincerely our thoughts are with you and you are in our prayers but please don't leave India, otherwise, it could become a global catastrophe.

And folks who have recently arrived into other countries FROM India, please follow the quarantine protocols and kindly get tested soon as you can.

May God help us.
 
Do you have a link to the article? It reads pretty badly, doesn't seem genuine. It also doesn't mention how long before he travelled did he get his second dosage. I don't think one can take anything away from the efficacy of the (assuming Moderna) vaccine against the Indian variant from a single case. That is granting that this article is genuine.
 
https://www.latestnewssouthafrica.c...s-expert-dr-rajendra-kapila-dies-of-covid-19/
It has been confirmed on social media that Infectious diseases expert, Dr Rajendra Kapila has sadly passed away. He was reported to have died on May 3 2021.

According to information from sources, Rajendra Kapila had come to Ghaziabad to look after his ailing father in law, unfortunately, contracted Covid 19 and rapidly Succumbed to it. He had two Pfizer shots, succumbed to the Indian variant.

He was an infectious disease specialist in Newark, New Jersey. Rajendra received his medical degree from Maulana Azad Medical College and has been in practice for more than 20 years.
Dr Kapila completed a residency at Umdnj University Hospital.
Reacting to his death U.S Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, Professor Robert A Schwartz in a series of tweets wrote – Condolences to the family of Rajendra Kapila, the Rutgers professor, @CityofNewarkNJ physician, and @USArmy veteran who advocated for the finest healthcare attainable for all. He will be remembered for his unmatched sagacity and conduct exemplarily of the @AOA_societ motto.

https://twitter.com/Prof_Dr_RAS/sta...s-expert-dr-rajendra-kapila-dies-of-covid-19/
 
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