A Covid-19 variant spreading in India is more contagious and may be dodging vaccine protections, contributing to the country's explosive outbreak, the World Health Organization's chief scientist said.
In an interview with AFP, Soumya Swaminathan warned that "the epidemiological features that we see in India today do indicate that it's an extremely rapidly spreading variant".
India on Saturday for the first time registered more than 4,000 COVID-19 deaths in just 24 hours, and more than 400,000 new infections.
New Delhi has struggled to contain the outbreak, which has overwhelmed its healthcare system, and many experts suspect the official death and case numbers are a gross underestimate.
Swaminathan, an Indian paediatrician and clinical scientist, said the B.1.617 variant of COVID-19, which was first detected in India last October, was clearly a contributing factor to the catastrophe unfolding in her homeland.
"There have been many accelerators that are fed into this," the 62-year-old said, stressing that "a more rapidly spreading virus is one of them".
The WHO recently listed B.1.617 which counts several sub-lineages with slightly different mutations and characteristics as a "variant of interest".
- Resistant to antibodies? -
But so far it has stopped short of adding it to its short list of "variant of concern" -- a label indicating it is more dangerous than the original version of the virus by being more transmissible, deadly or able to get past vaccine protections.
Several national health authorities, including in the United States and Britain, have meanwhile said they consider B.1.617 a variant of concern, and Swaminathan said she expected the WHO to soon follow suit.
"B 1.617 is likely to be a variant of concern because it has some mutations which increase transmission, and which also potentially could make (it) resistant to antibodies that are generated by vaccination or by natural infection," she said.
But she insisted that the variant alone could not be blamed for the dramatic surge in cases and deaths seen in India, lamenting that the country appeared to have let down its guard down, with "huge social mixing and large gatherings".
Mass election rallies held by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other politicians have for instance partly been blamed for the staggering rise in infections.
But even as many in India felt the crisis was over, dropping mask-wearing and other protection measures, the virus was quietly spreading.
- 'Taking off vertically' -
"In a large country like India, you could have transmission at low levels, which is what happened for many months," Swaminathan said.
"It was endemic (and) probably gradually increasing," she said, decrying that "those early signs were missed until it reached the point at which it was taking off vertically."
"At that point it's very hard to suppress, because it's then involving tens of thousands of people and it's multiplying at a rate at which it's very difficult to stop."
While India is now trying to scale up vaccination to rein in the outbreak, Swaminathan warned that the jabs alone would not be enough to gain control of the situation.
She pointed out that India, the world's largest vaccine-making nation, had only fully vaccinated around two percent of the 1.3 billion-plus population.
"It's going to take many months if not years to get to the point of 70 to 80 percent coverage," she said.
With that prospect, Swaminathan stressed that "for the foreseeable future, we need to depend on our tried and tested public health and social measures" to bring down transmission.
The surge in India is frightening not only due to the horrifying number of people who are sick and dying there, but also because the exploding infection numbers dramatically increase the chances of new and more dangerous variants emerging.
"The more the virus is replicating and spreading and transmitting, the more chances are that... mutations will develop and adapt," Swaminathan said.
"Variants which accumulate a lot of mutations may ultimately become resistant to the current vaccines that we have," she warned.
"That's going to be a problem for the whole world."
ETX Studio
Mon May 10 2021
Soumya Swaminathan warned that "the epidemiological features that we see in India today do indicate that it's an extremely rapidly spreading variant". ETXStudiopic
Semua laluan Malaysia-Thai di daerah Tak Bai, Sungai Golok, Weng ditutup sementara
Jalan ke Sungai Golok dari daerah Tak Bai ditutup untuk pemeriksaan selepas skuad pemusnah bom menemukan paku bertaburan di jalan raya.
Pengwujudan dua negara berdaulat satu penyelesaian
Perdana Menteri Jordan, Bisher Hani Al Khaswneh berkata Israel terus melakukan kesilapan dengan menyerang gaza dan berharap untuk mendapat hasil yang berbeza. Beliau turut berkata pengwujudan dua negara berdaulat adalah satu penyelesaian asas yang enggan difahami dan diterima Israel.
PETRONAS dagangan jual 16 bilion liter bahan api, perolehan RM37.55 bilion
Ini laporam yangh baharu kami terima.
PETRONAS Dagangan Bhd mencatatkan jumlah jualan melebihi 16 bilion liter bahan api tahun lalu, meningkat lapan peratus tahun ke tahun, manakala perolehan sebanyak RM37.55 bilion.
PETRONAS Dagangan Bhd mencatatkan jumlah jualan melebihi 16 bilion liter bahan api tahun lalu, meningkat lapan peratus tahun ke tahun, manakala perolehan sebanyak RM37.55 bilion.
Hukuman gantung lelaki bunuh, tidur bersama mayat rakan, diganti penjara 30 tahun
Ini laporan yang baharu kami terima.
Seorang pekerja rencam yang didapati bersalah membunuh rakannya dan tidur bersama mayat mangsa selama empat hari terlepas tali gantung apabila Mahkamah Rayuan Putrajaya hari ini, menggantikan hukuman mati yang dijatuhkan terhadap lelaki itu dengan penjara 30 tahun.
Seorang pekerja rencam yang didapati bersalah membunuh rakannya dan tidur bersama mayat mangsa selama empat hari terlepas tali gantung apabila Mahkamah Rayuan Putrajaya hari ini, menggantikan hukuman mati yang dijatuhkan terhadap lelaki itu dengan penjara 30 tahun.
Kelas terapung atasi masalah sekolah padat
Pelaksanaan kelas terampung di sekolah-sekolah yang mempunyai kepadatan tinggi dapat membantu mengatasi isu kesesakan pelajar.
MINDEF, ATM aktifkan Tabung Tragedi Lumut 24
Kementerian Pertahanan dan Angkatan Tentera Malaysia (ATM) menubuhkan satu tabung khas ‘Tabung Tragedi Lumut 24’ bagi memudahkan warga ATM serta orang ramai menghulurkan bantuan kewangan kepada waris keluarga mangsa nahas helikopter di Pangkalan Tentera Laut Diraja Malaysia (TLDM) Lumut, 23 April lepas.
Konflik Gaza perlukan kerjasama dunia
Ketegangan konflik Gaza jadi tumpuan hari terakhir WEF di Riyadh, Arab Saudi.
Rampasan 30 kg ganja, lebih 1 tan daun ketum
Polis Perlis menumpaskan kegiatan penyeludupan ganja dan daun ketum dengan merampas 30kg ketulan mampat dadah jenis ganja bernilai RM93,000 dan daun ketum seberat 1.02 tan bernilai RM10,200.
LBS akhiri kempen tawar hadiah RM1.5 juta buat 1,400 pembeli
LBS mengakhiri kempen Fabulous Extra dengan hadiah RM1.5 juta terdiri daripada Perodua Axia, motosikal, set teater rumah dan basikal gunung buat 1,400 pembeli bertuah.
Kadar antara bank jangka pendek ditutup kukuh
Kadar antara bank jangka pendek ditutup kukuh hari ini susulan operasi Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) yang menyerap lebihan mudah tunai daripada sistem kewangan.
Kelaparan akut jejaskan 281.6 juta orang tahun lepas - PBB
Tahap bahaya kelaparan akut menjejaskan 281.6 juta orang tahun lepas, tahun kelima berturut-turut bahawa ketakjaminan makanan semakin memburuk.
Hamilton optimis kedudukan lebih baik di GP China
Lewis Hamilton melihat potensi kedudukan yang lebih baik dalam saingan Grand Prix yang kembali ke China buat pertama kali dalam tempoh lima tahun, hujung minggu ini.
'Selfish!' - Fasha Sandha sedih raya di Perlis tak jadi gara-gara dijangkiti COVID-19
Fasha berkata dia mula melakukan pemeriksaan COVID-19 selepas berasa tidak sihat badan dan mengalami bersin tidak henti sejak Raya pertama.
Kes COVID-19 catat penurunan ketara pada ME 14/2024 - KKM
Jumlah kes COVID-19 menurun 97.1 peratus kepada 493 kes pada Minggu Epidemiologi ke-14 (ME 14/2024) iaitu bagi tempoh 31 Mac hingga 6 April lepas berbanding 17,256 kes pada ME 1/2024.
China jadikan pengalaman pencegahan COVID-19 untuk hadapi pandemik masa depan
China akan menjadikan pengalaman dalam pencegahan dan kawalan COVID-19 untuk membuat persediaan yang lebih proaktif untuk menghadapi pandemik masa depan seperti "Penyakit X".
Negara berdepan ketirisan subsidi diesel serius - Amir Hamzah
Negara kini sedang berdepan isu ketirisan subsidi diesel yang serius dan wujud kemungkinan terdapat pihak yang tidak layak masih menikmati subsidi itu, kata Menteri Kewangan II Datuk Seri Amir Hamzah.
Kematian akibat kemalangan jalan raya lebih tinggi daripada COVID-19 - Anthony Loke
PDRM akan mengeluarkan data mengenai kemalangan jalan raya pada setiap hari, bukan setahun sekali seperti diamalkan sebelum ini.
Ismail Sabri ziarah lapan beradik yatim piatu akibat COVID-19
Ismail Sabri tiba kira-kira jam 2 petang di kediaman lapan beradik itu di Taman Adenium, Bukit Beruntung pada Selasa.
Teori konspirasi 'Penyakit X'
Ahli teori konspirasi AS sekali lagi membuat 'keuntungan' selepas PBB memberi amaran tentang wabak lebih berbahaya iaitu 'Penyakit X'.
Reformasi dasar, kukuhkan perlindungan, produktiviti pekerja tidak formal
Reformasi dasar perlu dilakukan dalam usaha meningkatkan perlindungan dan produktiviti pekerja tidak formal di Malaysia.