This could be the one that gets you
HILARY BRUECK, BUSINESS INSIDER
There's
a new coronavirus variant
traveling around this summer at a record clip.By Kal Kallagher
It's
a variant of Omicron called BA.5, and it's causing a stir largely because it
has evolved even further away than other Omicron variants did from the
coronavirus we already knew.
Previously,
getting infected with Omicron meant you probably had some
protection against reinfection for a few months.
But
BA.5 is strategically
evading our built-up defenses against prior versions of
the virus. This all means that reinfections
– even in vaccinated and recently infected people – are up, way
up.
So,
yes, BA.5 is easier to catch than other variants have been, and it may feel like
it's lurking everywhere right now, infecting anyone, whether or not you've
already had a vaccine, a booster shot, and/or a recent bout of COVID-19.
"If
you were infected with BA.1, you really don't have a lot of good protection against
BA.4/5," Dr. Anthony Fauci, the US's top infectious-disease expert, said
Tuesday.
We asked four top public-health experts to help us figure out how worried we should be about this new, extra-stealthy Omicron subvariant.
Telling
us how concerned to be about new infectious-disease threats is typically what
these people do for a living. But rating BA.5 gave them some pause.
"I
can't answer that," Dr. Celine
Gounder, an infectious-disease expert and the editor at large for
public health at Kaiser Health News, said. "Because it depends on your
vaccination status, your age, your health, your occupation, your living
situation, etc., etc."
Others
did give hard numbers, but there was variation in their answers based on where
you may live or who you are.
If
you're up to date on vaccines, one expert says your worry scale should register
at '3 out of 10'
Dr.
Preeti Malani, an infectious-disease physician at the University of Michigan,
was willing to give a hard and fast number. "I'd say 3 out of 10,"
she said, expressing mild concern about the new variant.
"BA.5
is everywhere, and if you haven't gotten it yet, the odds are pretty" good
you will," Malani said, adding: "But if you are up to date on
vaccines, the illness should be mild and without major medical
consequences."
While
there's a "high risk of exposure" to this variant, she said there
were also "lots of reasons to be hopeful." Early treatment
with Paxlovid is now free for all Americans who may need it.
"With home testing and rapid connection to
treatment (for those at risk of complicated infection), COVID is
manageable," Malani said.
Older
adults without booster shots should be more worried
In
the UK, which is at least a few weeks ahead of the US in terms of variant spread,
national health-security
experts have assessed that the protection offered by vaccines
against BA.5 "likely remains comparable to that observed previously,"
which means vaccinated and boosted people, while certainly at risk of getting
sick with BA.5, likely won't end up in the hospital or dead.
For
those who aren't up to date on shots, and who don't
have a COVID-19 action plan, outcomes could be bad.
The European
Union earlier this week released new recommendations for a
second booster for all adults 60 and older, in line with what the US already
recommends.
"We
are currently seeing increasing COVID-19-case notification rates and an
increasing trend in hospital and ICU admissions and occupancy in several
countries, mainly driven by the BA.5 sublineage of Omicron," Dr. Andrea
Ammon, the director of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, said.
"There
are still too many individuals at risk of severe COVID-19 infection whom we
need to protect as soon as possible," she added.
Regional
differences in vaccination rates and heat waves may complicate the calculation
Katelyn
Jetelina, a public-health expert who runs the popular Your
Local Epidemiologist blog wasn't willing to give a single
number for the entire US. She said the risk was too variable right now, based
on where you live.
"I'm
quite worried about the South," she said, ranking it a 7 out of 10 because
of low rates of booster shots, low Paxlovid usage, low testing, and
"everyone going inside for the heat."
The
South also had a relatively low number of infections in the recent BA.2.12.1
wave, unlike the Northeast, where Jetelina said people should be at about a 4
out of 10 level of concern.
Bottom
line: If you're boosted, wearing masks
when appropriate, and have a test and treatment action plan for if
you do get sick, most experts agree this wave should turn out OK for you.
But
like all risk calculations, "the number is different based on who it is
being applied to," as Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at Johns Hopkins
Center for Health Security, said.
"If
it is a fresh lung-transplant patient, the number would be 10. For a healthy
18-year-old, it would be 0," he said. "Risk is not
one-size-fits-all."
This
article was originally published by Business Insider.