New Delhi: The World Health Organization has said the Indian strain of Covid-19 has become a ‘variant of concern at the global level.’
The UN health agency said on Monday that the B.1.617 variant of Covid-19, first found in India in October 2020, seemed to be transmitting more easily than the original version of the virus, and might possibly have some increased resistance to vaccine protections.
The variant currently spreading in India, which is facing an explosive outbreak of the pandemic’s second wave, appears to be more contagious and has been classified as being “of concern”, it said.
“There is some available information to suggest increased transmissibility of the B.1.617,” Maria Van Kerkove, the WHO’s lead on Covid-19, told media persons, and pointed to early studies “suggesting that there is some reduced neutralization”.
“As such we are classifying this as a variant of concern at the global level,” she said, adding that more details would be provided in the WHO’s weekly epidemiological update.
India, suffering from one of the worst outbreaks in the world, reported nearly 390,000 fresh infections and more than 3,876 new deaths on Monday.
The devastating wave has overwhelmed the South Asian country’s healthcare system, and experts have said official figures for cases and fatalities are much lower than the actual numbers.
It has for some time been feared that B.1.617 — which counts several sub-lineages with slightly different mutations and characteristics — might be contributing to the alarming spread.
So far, the WHO had listed it merely as a “variant of interest”. Now it will be added to the list containing three other variants of Covid-19 — those first detected in Britain, Brazil, and South Africa — which also the WHO has classified as being “of concern”.
They are seen as more dangerous than the original version of the virus by being more transmissible, deadly, or able to get past vaccine protections.
About the B.1.617 variant, Van Kerkove stressed that for the time being “we don’t have anything to suggest that our diagnostics or therapeutics and our vaccines don’t work”.
The WHO’s chief scientist, Soumya Swaminathan, said “what we know now is that the vaccines work, the diagnostics work, the same treatments that are used for the regular virus work.”
“So there’s really no need to change any of those, and in fact… people should go ahead and get whatever vaccine is available to them and that they are eligible for.”