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Reduced hospitalisation risk for Omicron patients: US study 

AFP
CaliforniaUpdated: Jan 13, 2022, 11:57 PM IST
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Omicron Photograph:(AFP)

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The COVID-19 Omicron variant is less dangerous than the previous Delta strain, resulting in fewer hospitalizations in the United States.

A preliminary US study of nearly 70,000 Covid positive people showed a substantially reduced risk of hospitalisation and death from Omicron even after controlling for growing population immunity levels.

According to the paper, people infected with Omicron were half as likely to be hospitalized, 75% less likely to require intensive care, and 90% less likely to die than those infected with the formerly dominant Delta variant.

Of some 50,000 people infected with Omicron, none ended up on a ventilator.

Omicron patients stayed in the hospital for a median of 1.5 days, compared to five days for Delta, and 90 percent of Omicron patients were discharged in three or fewer days.

The analysis was conducted on data from the Kaiser Permanente Southern California hospital system, which serves a population of around 4.7 million people, between December 1, 2021, and January 2, 2022, when both strains were circulating widely.

The findings build on accumulating population-level research from countries including South Africa and Britain, but also on animal and cell-based testing, which has found Omicron replicates better in the upper airways compared to the lungs.

The new paper, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, was carried out by researchers from the University of California, Berkeley, Kaiser Permanente and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

On a briefing call Wednesday, CDC director Rochelle Walensky told reporters that "this study controlled for important key parameters such as age, sex, prior SARS-CoV-2 infection, prior vaccination, and comorbidities."

The results thus suggest that Omicron is "intrinsically less severe than Delta," and the observed reductions in severe cases aren't only the result of more people being vaccinated and infected over time, the paper said.

In addition, while the study noted reduced vaccine efficacy against infection from Omicron, it also found substantial ongoing protection against severe outcomes.

Walensky warned that the results should not lead to complacency since Omicron's extreme transmissibility is still stretching the United States' already over-extended health care system and its exhausted health workers.

The country is currently seeing an average of 750,000 cases a day, though that figure is soon expected to exceed a million, with around 150,000 total COVID hospitalizations, and more than 1,600 daily deaths.

President Joe Biden's chief medical advisor, Anthony Fauci, predicted Tuesday that "Omicron, with its extraordinary, unprecedented degree of efficiency of transmissibility, will ultimately find just about everybody."

But he added that after the country emerged from its current wave, it would transition towards a future of living with the virus, with COVID vaccines moderating severe disease for the majority and effective treatments available for the most vulnerable.