I didn't get chance to do thread after Friday @IndependentSage briefing (viewable here: )
so here is a quick update.
TLDR: cases and admissions have likely peaked, but expect schools to prolong the wave... 1/10
Reported cases have peaked and in all nations.
While many things affect case reporting, positivity rates are also falling (good). ONS always lags by a week or two, but hopefully we will see sustained drops in a week or two.
BUT prevalence is still *extraordinarily* high. 2/10
Cases are now falling in all English regions - you can see a clear pre-Xmas change in London likely driven by people cancelling plans to avoid being sick at Xmas.
NE last to peak, but it has.
Again ONS is a bit lagged, but shows London has and other regions flattening 3/10
Hospital occupancy is falling in N Ireland and slowing in other nations. Occupancy close to first 2020 wave.
Looks like admissions have peaked - but remain high - across England. ICUs however have not been stressed by Covid this winter. 4/10
So admissions will not reach the levels in the SAGE Spi-M scenarios - SAGE think likely because people voluntarily reduced contacts during Omicron + boosters.
This is obv better news BUT do NOT think that NHS has coped... 5/10
Many staff are off sick & A&E's are overflowing. Waits are long, more than 1/6 hosps have declared critical incidents & cancelled treatments. Docs & nurses are sharing the moral injury of being forced to give suboptimal care.
Deaths have been going up - both by reported date (affected by holiday delays) and by date of death - in fact by date of death, we are seeing highest daily counts since Feb 2021 - before most people were vaccinated. 7/10
Boosters have been key this winter - but after a massive pre-Xmas surge, demand has dropped off a cliff. Not surprising given people keep being told that Omicron is fine and it's over.
But it's not and it isn't and boosters are vital.
Plus most children are NOT vaxxed 8/10
Speaking of children... while reported cases are going down in all adult age groups and teenagers, they are *not* in pre school and primary age children.
This comes with disruption -> 300K children off first week of term and many teachers 9/10
Hosp admissions in kids, esp under 5's, have been v v high (but now falling?). More kids admitted last month than first 8 months of pandemic.
Most stay in hosp only a day or two BUT they would likely be at home if no covid.
We should care more about kids getting covid. 10/10
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First they find that the largest *increase* in Covid admissions by age was in children, particularly under 12s and under 5s. This was both in admissions *for* and admissions *with* - about 60% were directly for Covid.
About half had no pre-existing health conditions. 2/4
They do a very preliminary comparison between Omicron and Delta (unvaccinated patients only) and find that while Omicron seems to be causing fewer hospitalisations in *adults*, the opposite is true in *children*.
Again this is preliminary but needs to be looked into further. 3/4
A virus isn't endemic just cos a govt minister says it is and just cos people want it to be.
The current pattern of waning vax, new immune evasive variants, and minimal public health response seem set to doom us to massive surges once or twice a year. 1\5
If that continues we'll keep picking off the vulnerable, keep stressing a weakening NHS, create more chronic illness & mass disruption through people off sick every time. Lower quality of life for all of us.
Uncertainty in being able to plan months ahead cos of variants 2\5
And when the next pandemic comes, do we just add that disease to our repertoire after a period of mass death?
What when diseases like malaria move north through climate change?
TLDR: not over yet. Good news is high booster coverage in over 50s & no rise in ICU. Bad news is high strain on hospitals, no plan for schools & worsening admissions & long covid for kids.
+ Indie Sage has some suggestions...
1/21
Firstly Omicron - now dominant in Scotland, Wales & England. Probably in NI but no recent data. N Ireland is about week behind other nations.
Omicron dominant in all English regions, London c. 1 week ahead.
Omicron's rise has been very rapid! 2/21
Omicron is v good at infecting vaxxed people - even being boosted only gives you about 40% protection after 10 weeks.
Booster gives *88%* protection against hospital admission - GET IT!
NB booster hosp protection for Delta was close to 100%, Omicron has made things worse. 3/21
TLDR: things are pretty bad and I'm sad & bewildered at lack of govt action and general levels of hopium. 1/18
First off cases... reported levels in England now more than twice as high as previous peak last January and more than three times higher than at start of December.
Positivity rates are also rising v steeply - testing is not keeping up with cases.
All regions rising fast, London highest and earliest. Do not take London small case drop too seriously - drop in pre xmas tests & positivity still rising. Plus xmas likely to boost again. 3/18
I wrote this with @adsquires because next term is coming quickly and we need to plan for how to *minimise* infection in kids & teachers and *minimise* disruption to education.
Govt still not doing anything - so this thread summarises what I am afraid will happen: