The Australian states each have fairly discrete outbreaks with quite different profiles.
Here's New South Wales, where NPIs were first dropped as BA.1 arrived, and multiple super-spreader events in mid-December. Together that paved the way for the total dominance at ~95%.
Victoria's profile is quite different. There was a larger Delta outbreak for Omicron to overcome.
By now the end result is becoming similar to NSW, with BA.1 at ~92%.
Queensland has been dominated by Omicron - the Delta outbreaks before NPIs were dropped were well controlled.
Queensland's samples have been a bit thin since the holiday break and are unusually lagging the larger states at present.
At one point in late December, South Australia had the purest Omicron outbreak in Australia, probably globally.
It's interesting to see Delta has been hanging on since, even though the prior Delta outbreak was at relatively low case rates.
In Western Australia, a few small Delta and Omicron community outbreaks occurred during December and early January.
Now a larger outbreak of Omicron has started, which looks likely to be BA.1
BA.1 with the Spike R346K mutation was classified quite recently as BA.1.1. That mutation is understood to give increased immunity escape.
That lineage change has not yet flowed out to databases and websites.
Here's the frequency of BA.1.1 in Australian samples:
Here's an analysis of cases and deaths, for Australia, then state-by-state.
I couldn't bear to post this last week as the case rate was one of the worst in the world (with WA at near-zero). That seems to have been the peak.
The death rate continues to increase.
New South Wales is the worst affected state, where the case rate rose to just under 4,000 per 100K population. If NSW was a country, that would've been the highest rate globally for any comparable country.
Victoria rose to a similar level, just slightly lower on this "per population" basis.
The rise in cases was even steeper than in NSW, so the impact of that on deaths is likely yet to come.
Here's the latest variant picture for BA.1 (Omicron) with the Spike R346K mutation. That mutation helps with immunity escape.
This combination was recently identified as a new sub-lineage BA.1.1, but that will take some time to filter through to databases and websites.
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The global analysis (above) of BA.1 with the Spike R346K mutation shows it's frequency was low, but has been steadily increasing (as a proportion of all BA.1 samples).
In the United Kingdom, the frequency of BA.1 with the Spike R346K mutation has been steadily growing, recently at ~25% (of all BA.1 samples).