Covid-19 variant identified in India may increase hospitalizations, UK officials say

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Covid-19 variant identified in India may increase hospitalizations, UK officials say

CNN)The B.1.617.2 coronavirus variant that was first identified in India is now believed to be dominant in the United Kingdom, Public Health England (PHE) said Thursday, adding that early evidence suggests it could cause an increased risk of hospitalization in comparison to the strain that was first detected in England.

While PHE cautioned that more data is needed, its early findings showed that the B.1.617.2 or "Delta" variant was more likely to cause serious illness than the B.1.1.7 or "Alpha" variant, which had been dominant in the UK since it was first detected in southeast England last fall.
An analysis of 38,805 sequenced cases in England showed that the Delta variant carried 2.61 times the risk of hospitalization within 14 days compared with the Alpha variant, when variables such as age, sex, ethnicity and vaccination status were taken into consideration.
    This week, at least 278 people with the Delta variant attended hospital emergency departments across the UK, resulting in 94 people being admitted to hospital overnight -- an increase from the 201 people with the Delta variant who attended emergency departments last week, including 43 overnight admissions, PHE outlined. "The majority of these had not been vaccinated," PHE highlighted.
     
    The news raises serious questions about the plan to lift all remaining coronavirus restrictions in England on June 21. The decision to move ahead with that timeframe has not yet been finalized, UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock told CNN Thursday, adding that the government continues to monitor the data. ...
      But ministers are also now moving to tighten the UK's borders.
      On Thursday, the government removed Portugal from its "green list" of countries (where travel is permitted without quarantining), and added seven more countries to the "red list" (of places that should not be visited) in an attempt to safeguard its reopening plan. The move has sent shock waves through Europe's travel industry, just as it was beginning to find its feet following months of lockdown restrictions.
       
      Portugal, including the Azores and Madeira, was added to the UK's "amber" list, requiring travelers to quarantine for 10 days and take two Covid-19 tests upon return to the UK. ...
       
       
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