Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Omicron cases peak but path ahead uncertain

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2022 10:45 AM
  • Omicron cases peak but path ahead uncertain

VANCOUVER - The Omicron wave appears to be cresting across the country, but it's difficult to predict what's next for the pandemic, experts say.

Prof. Bernard Crespi, an evolutionary biologist at Simon Fraser University, said the development of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 gives clues as to what might come.

Omicron evolved to evade pre-existing immunity and reproduce at a much faster rate, he said.

"Those two are connected to one another because you can really only spread fast if the population does not have the immune defences against you," he said, referring to the Omicron variant.

Omicron burned through susceptible populations, leaving a higher level of natural immunity, he said in an interview.

"That's a good thing."

It will be more difficult for the next variant to get a foothold in Canada because most people have immunity after being infected with Omicron, or they have been vaccinated, or a combination of both, Crespi said.

"All else being equal, the next variant and the next wave are more likely to be relatively mild."

Dr. Hans Kluge, the director of the World Health Organization's European region, echoed that opinion.

"This pandemic, like all other pandemics before it, will end, but it is far too early to relax."

Omicron offers "plausible hope for stabilization and normalization" with the combination of immunity and vaccination, he said in a statement.

Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, said last week there are positive signs the Omicron wave is peaking, and now it's time for governments to "plan towards moving back to something that is nearer normalcy."

While the ability of a new mutation to spread might be impeded because of higher levels of immunity, Crespi said there is really no good way to accurately gauge virulence, a measure of how likely a variant is to put people in hospital or kill them.

Scientists can't predict the next variant because it depends on random events, including its mutations and where they come from, he said, pointing to the high level of genetic changes in the virus in people who have a weakened immune system.

There's always a possibility that some variant could come along that would spread like Omicron but end up worse, in terms of hospitalization and death, predominantly among the unvaccinated, he said.

Dr. Nelson Lee, interim director of the Institute for Pandemics at the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public Health, called the virus that causes COVID-19 unpredictable.

"There are people thinking that maybe the virus is evolving to a stage that it's getting mild and that it will cause really trivial disease that we can ignore," he said. "I disagree with that."

The impact of a large number of infections and hospitalizations is still significant, he said.

The coronavirus changes rapidly, as seen with its evolution from the Delta variant to Omicron, so it is hard to predict how it will mutate again, he said.

Crespi said humans have always been "absolute sitting ducks" for pandemics.

"We're just like a viruses' dream, in terms of our high density, our mobility and our non-centralized health-care systems."

Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Toronto, said different parts of the country are in various phases of the Omicron wave.

The declining infection rate can be measured through wastewater analysis, hospitalization numbers and modelling studies, he said.

While case counts decline or level off, that doesn't mean the danger has completely receded, because "you still have to come down the other side of the mountain, and it's a really tall mountain," he said.

The impact of the next variant can be blunted by a combination of vaccinations, masking and other public health guidelines, just as was done with Omicron, he said.

However, Crespi said it "gets stupid" to protect people with the original mRNA vaccine because that virus is "long, long gone."

"You're vaccinating against the ghost of a virus because people aren't going to get that anymore. They're going to get a virus that's quite different."

Instead, Lee said researchers may need to develop a pan-coronavirus vaccine with a broad spectrum that can provide more immunity against a variety of virus strains.

Crespi said the transition from pandemic to full endemic, such as the common cold, could take anywhere from a few years to perhaps dozens or hundreds of years, and the virus will likely still pack a punch.

"It'll probably be one that has harsh fangs and is quite dangerous for older people."

Rather than an endemic, Lee said he believes the virus that causes COVID-19 will transition to an epidemic with seasonal waves like the flu.

"It can cause hospitalizations, winter surges and a lot of appearances in the community," he said.

Crespi said moving to that scenario would have to come with a high rate of global vaccinations.

"What I can conclude is that it's hard to predict a timeline, but we are slowly moving toward the direction of epidemic disease."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Possible tornado touched down in northern B.C.

Possible tornado touched down in northern B.C.
Environment Canada is investigating the possibility that a tornado swept through the Fort St. John area in northern B.C. Meteorologist Doug Lundquist says the powerful system started above the wildfires in the Interior last week, on the same day much of the town of Lytton was destroyed by a fire.

Possible tornado touched down in northern B.C.

IHIT taken over case with body found in Abbotsford

IHIT taken over case with body found in Abbotsford
This morning, Monday, July 5, 2021, at 5:09 am, Abbotsford Police Patrol officers responded to a report of a body found in the Clinton Ave access parking lot of Clearbrook Park.   

IHIT taken over case with body found in Abbotsford

Trudeau hits road in campaign-style announcement

Trudeau hits road in campaign-style announcement
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is back on the road, announcing hundreds of millions of dollars in climate spending from his Liberal government Monday in what would not have looked out of place on the campaign trail.

Trudeau hits road in campaign-style announcement

Canada COVID Alert app: $20M for limited results

Canada COVID Alert app: $20M for limited results
The federal government spent $20 million on a smartphone application designed to alert users to possible COVID-19 exposures, and new data obtained by The Canadian Press shows the results didn't live up to expectations.

Canada COVID Alert app: $20M for limited results

Metro Vancouver real estate market cooled in June

Metro Vancouver real estate market cooled in June
The real estate market in Metro Vancouver eased in June from its record-setting pace in March and April. The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says the number of home sold in the region totalled 3,762 last month, up 54 per cent from the 2,443 sales recorded a year earlier, but down 11.9 per cent from the 4,268 sold in May 2021.

Metro Vancouver real estate market cooled in June

Two Vancouver Police officers seriously stabbed in Chinatown

Two Vancouver Police officers seriously stabbed in Chinatown
Two Vancouver Police officers were stabbed this morning while responding to a 9-1-1 call about a forcible confinement involving a 2 year-old child. Both officers were transported to hospital where they are now in stable condition.

Two Vancouver Police officers seriously stabbed in Chinatown