The World Health Organisation has raised concerns about the Omicron COVID-19 variant which is spreading at a rate unseen with previous mutations.
WHO Director-General Tedros-Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that dismissing the variant as mild is concerning enough, but the symptoms are also just as alarming.
Addressing a press conference, Tedros said that the variant has been detected in 77 countries so far, but it is probably in most even if it hasn’t been detected yet.
British officials have revealed that the country is currently experiencing a tidal wave of infections from the newly discovered variant. It has so far outcompeted the Delta variant in London.
The UK reported its first death from the variant on Monday, with 78,610 cases of COVID reported on Wednesday. This is the highest number of daily cases since the pandemic began.
Omicron also went from accounting for 0.4% of circulating virus in the US in the week of December 4 to 2.9% the following week. While data from South Africa suggests Omicron might be causing milder symptoms than previous variants, experts stress its too early to make firm conclusions.
‘We’re concerned that people are dismissing Omicron as mild. Surely, we have learned by now that we underestimate this virus at our peril’ said Tedros.
Local doctor Frank Portelli highlighted the symptoms of Omicron, pointing towards massive fatigue, muscle pain, head aches, sweating throughout the night and a runny nose.
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Photo Source: Frank Portelli FB