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Omicron does not show a faster viral clearance in vaccinated people compared with unvaccinated ones and infectivity period doesn’t appear shorter than other forms of COVID-19: public health

A report by Public Health Ontario says the period of infectivity for the Omicron variant of COVID-19 does not appear to be shorter than other forms of the virus, and may be longer in some cases.

The agency says that while there is limited evidence on the infectivity of Omicron, its own modelling data suggests people remain contagious for a similar amount of time.

And it says that, unlike other variants of concern, Omicron does not seem to show a faster viral clearance in vaccinated people compared with unvaccinated ones.


COVID-19 hits one of the last uninfected places on the planet

When the coronavirus began spreading around the world, the remote Pacific archipelago of Kiribati closed its borders, ensuring the disease didn’t reach its shores for nearly two full years.

Kiribati finally began reopening this month, allowing the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to charter a plane to bring home 54 of the island nation’s citizens. Many of those aboard were missionaries who had left Kiribati before the border closure to spread the faith abroad for what is commonly known as the Mormon church.

Officials tested each returning passenger three times in nearby Fiji, required that they be vaccinated, and put them in quarantine with additional testing when they arrived home.

It wasn’t enough.

More than half the passengers tested positive for the virus, which has now slipped out into the community and prompted the government to declare a state of disaster. An initial 36 positive cases from the flight had ballooned to 181 cases by Friday.

Kiribati and several other small Pacific nations were among the last places on the planet to have avoided any virus outbreaks, thanks to their remote locations and strict border controls. But their defences appear no match against the highly contagious omicron variant.


More than 1,000 deaths from COVID-19 reported in Ontario this month

The province has logged persistently high numbers of fatalities each day this month, despite the dominant Omicron variant of the virus typically causing milder illness and all but replacing the more severe Delta variant almost six weeks ago, while circulating among a well-vaccinated population.

Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore said officials are trying to ascertain what factors are causing so many Ontarians to die, including whether Delta or Omicron or a combination of the two is responsible, but whole genome sequencing to determine variant type takes weeks.

Essentially 100 per cent of outbreaks in the community are Omicron right now, Dr. Moore said, but roughly 10 per cent of hospital admissions are “relevant to Delta.”




omicron: Omicron does not show a faster viral clearance in vaccinated people compared with unvaccinated ones and infectivity period doesn’t appear shorter than other forms of COVID-19: public health
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-omicron-infectivity-period-doesnt-appear-shorter-than-other-forms-of/


kiribati: COVID-19 hits one of the last uninfected places on the planet
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/world/article-covid-19-hits-one-of-the-last-uninfected-places-on-the-planet/


ont: More than 1,000 deaths from COVID-19 reported in Ontario this month
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-more-than-1000-deaths-from-covid-19-reported-in-ontario-this-month-top/