Johannesburg, December 3
The WHO has rushed a team of experts to South Africa’s Gauteng province, the epicentre of the new Omicron variant of Covid-19, to ramp up surveillance and contact-tracing efforts as the country grapples with rising cases of infection.
Omicron, which was first identified in South Africa exactly a week ago, now has been detected in at least 24 countries around the world, including India.
“We are deploying a surge team in Gauteng province to support surveillance and contact-tracing,” Dr Salam Gueye, World Health Organisation’s Regional Emergency Director for Africa, said in a media briefing on Thursday.
A team is already working in South Africa on genomic sequencing, he said.
Gauteng province, which is the economic hub of South Africa, has accounted for almost 80 per cent of the infections over the past week.
Some 11,500 new infections were registered on Thursday, a sharp rise from the 8,500 cases confirmed on the previous day. In contrast, daily infections were averaging between 200 and 300 in mid-November in the country, according to health officials. — PTI
Chief scientist urges people not to panic
Geneva: The World Health Organisation’s (WHO) chief scientist on Friday urged people not to panic over the emergence of the Omicron variant and said it was too early to say if vaccines needed to be reworked. Soumya Swaminathan said it was impossible to predict if Omicron would become a dominant strain. Reuters
(The article is generated from feeds via CT, The Chenab Times staff didn’t write this news.)
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