THREAD: on omicron, UK cases, London & what to do next...
Last post-briefing tweet thread of the year! 1/18
First Omicron... as of 11 December, Omicron was most common in Scotland and England but starting its growth in Wales & N Ireland. With its growth speed, shares of cases will now be much higher in all regions. 2/18
In England, UKHSA "S gene dropout" data shows it was 40% of cases by 13 DEcember. It will be dominant in England by now.
WHO first designated it a variant of concern & named it Omicron 3 weeks ago today. Crazy. 3/18
In England, it's growing fast in all regions (less than 2 day doubling time in many!) but is highest in London which is maybe 5 days ahead of other regions. 4/18
Imperial college released a report today showing high immune escape, rapid growth and no evidence that omicron was milder than delta.
Nationally, cases have reached record highs. Another record reported today.
Growth might slow over next few days because:
- school holidays
- delta might decline cos of boosters
- weekend
- testing backlogs 6/18
In fact on testing, we can see that we are doing tons of LFDs and the most PCR tests ever. Testing times are getting longer.
We might reach testing capacity next week, artifically flattening reported cases. 7/18
Back to cases... unsurprisingly (given where Omicron is most prevalent), Scotland and England are rising rapidly while Wales and NI still flat... Expect that to change over the next week.
Note that cases in under 11's sky high. Schools will be big issue next term. Again. 8/18
People in hospital are falling or flat everywhere except England where admissions are also going up. These are still mostly Delta!! Omicron admissions will start to be felt from next week on I think. And will (at least at first) be on top of these Delta ones :-(
9/18
Meanwhile we are seeing more Covid outbreaks in hospitals. We need to watch this because Omicron seems ridiculously catchable. Hospital workers need to be provided with upgraded masks asap.
Deaths are flat - do not expect recent case rises to be reflected in deaths for several weeks yet.
We are accelerating booster jabs - almost 800K in one day recently. We need to keep at that level and go even higher to reach people as soon as possible. 11/18
Soooo, let's talk about London where Omicron is now the large majority of cases.
It's the fastest growing region by far in terms of cases, positivity rates and hospital admissions. Many boroughs are showing insane recent growth. 12/18
Hosp admissions by primary diagnosis show increase in *both* admissions for Covid and more incidental admissions (e.g. trauma or caught covid while in hospital for something else).
This is consistent with no evidence that Omicron milder.
Critical care already v busy. 13/18
Cases are going up fastest in 20-29 year olds but all age groups in London are going up - even school age kids where cases *had* been dropping towards the end of term. 14/18
London is the least vaccinated, least boosted region of England with large difference by deprivation, espeically in the over 50s. This means vulnerable populations will be massively exposed to, and at risk from, Omicron. What are we doing to address this? 15/18
So overall things are not looking great.
Indie SAGE suggests having a mini circuit break until Christmas eve to stop as many people as possible getting infected next week - this will save lives, protect NHS and allow limited mixing over Xmas.
16/18
And this *must* come with govt support for affected businesses - they are already suffering greatly from voluntary cancellations (and I think need support regardless).
17/18
And finally, we *must* vaccinate the world. @UNHumanright reported over 100 companies able to produce vax that are not allowed to.
It's not a zero sum game. UK must support vax waivers and tech transfer to enable much higher vax production globally. 18/18
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SHORT THREAD: Some basic musings about hospital admissions and exponential growth.
88K cases reported today - let's assume just under half are Omicron - so ~40K. Delta hospital admissions have been running at about 1.7% of reported cases in last month. 1/5
Let's assume Omicron was half as likely to cause hospital admission as Delta. So 0.8% of reported cases end up in hospital. From 40K cases today that would result 340 admissions.
just FOUR doublings takes you to 5,440 admissions - far higher than last January peak. 2/5
The 40K cases today represent people infected about a week ago. Omicron has been doubling every 2 days. Even if that's slowed this week to 3 days, that's likely 2 more doubling baked into admissions. That means that FROM NOW we there'd be two more doublings exceeding jan peak 3/5
Four charts about why boosters can't do everything on their own.
1. There is a massive difference in booster uptake between the most and least deprived areas. And also a massive difference in those entirely unvaccinated.
What is plan to reach them? 1/4
2. There are big regional variations. London has the highest unvaccinated and least boosted population by far. It is also where epicentre of Omicron currently sits. There are far too many vulnerable people left in London. 2/4
3. There are big age differences that will take time to smooth out - even with our current booster acceleration.
In London (below), far too many teens remain unvaccinated and far too few over 50s boosted. 3/4
Quick thread on some omicron thoughts with @BBCNews today.
1. At population level, Omicron's sheer growth advantage is likely to outweigh any reduction in severity from existing immunity, at least in short term. More covid patient to NHS -> less NHS for everything else.
2. We can do more and we should do more - but how much more is the really hard question.
3. But *when* govt might do something is much harder to answer because Christmas is round the corner. If this were any other time, I suspect we'd there would be more public health measures in place already.
THREAD: Am going to post some clips of my interview just now with @SkyNews which hopefully will explain a bit more about omicron, UK and what we can do...
and I address *that* xmas party
1. Is it ok just cos it boosters should protect against severe disease?
2. importance of isolation if you are a household contact! and need for support...
England should follow Scotland in this.
3. And the government will *not* struggle to get measures through - the CRG are a minority and there is a large parliamentary majority for doing more. That is comes from other parties should not stop govt from doing the right things.