World / UK COVID-19 variant detected in 86 nations, S African variant in 44: WHO

The World Health Organization (WHO) has said the coronavirus variant that first emerged in the UK has been found in 86 countries. The British-identified variant, which was first reported to the WHO on December 14, 2020, has shown an increase in transmissibility, it added. The WHO further said that the South African-identified coronavirus variant has been detected in 44 countries.

Vikrant Shekhawat : Feb 10, 2021, 05:51 PM
Geneva: The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Tuesday (local time) announced that coronavirus variant B.1.1.7, which was first identified in the United Kingdom on September 20, has been reported in 86 countries.

The variant B.1.1.7 has shown an increase in transmissibility, and some evidence of increase in disease severity based on preliminary findings. As of February 7, an additional six countries have reported cases of this variant, CNN reported.

In the UK, for example, COVID-19 test samples of this strain increased from 63 per cent in the week of December 14 to 90 per cent in the week of January 18, the WHO said in its weekly epidemiological update.

The WHO has also been monitoring two additional coronavirus strains that are actively spreading: B.1.351, initially seen in South Africa, and the P.1 strain that was first identified in Brazil, CNN reported.

As of February 7, the B.1.351 strain has been reported in 44 countries , while the P.1 strain has been reported in 15 nations, said the WHO.

According to CNN, scientists are not surprised to see the coronavirus changing and evolving but they fear that a variant could mutate to the point that it causes more severe disease, bypasses the ability of tests to detect it or evades the protection provided by vaccination.