Thread on Omicron subvariants and what they might mean for UK:
TLDR: reasonable chance of a new wave of infections in 4-6 weeks or so, boosters should reduce admissions & deaths but not entirely. Ditto long covid. Can expect more future waves too. 1/12
the UK original Omicron wave was BA.1 in Dec/Jan, followed by BA.2 wave in March.
BA.2 remains dominant (98% of cases) and we are now on the firm downward slope of that wave, with infections & admissions decreasing rapidly.
But... 2/12
South Africa has just entered a new wave driven by new Omicron variants BA.4 and BA.5, while in the US Omicron variant BA.2.12.1 is growing rapidly.
A few recent papers have shed more light into what this might mean... 3/12
A preprint from @fucyanOvO investigated how good the blood of vaxxed people with/without BA.1 infection was at fighting BA.4, BA.5 and BA.2.12.1 off.
BA.4 & 5 better at escaping vax & inf immunity than BA.2 but not better at getting into cells. BA.2.12.1 better at both. 4/12
Previous infection with BA.1 (what we had in Dec/Jan) might well not stop you getting infected with these new substrains (prob due to mutation at L452)
@sigallab reported similar - although boosted *plus* BA.1 infection much better than just prev BA.1 infection (get vaxxed) 5/12
We don't know much about severity of these new Omicron variants - but so far assumption is that they are no worse than prev Omicrons - especially given high population prev infection & boosters.
Although boosters wane rapidly vs infection, less so against severe disease. 6/12
BA.4, BA.5 & BA.2.12.1 *are* in the UK but in v low numbers.
However, most recent data for England shows them growing as a % of cases against BA.2 (current dominant one). Still *tiny numbers* so nothing definitive.
Wld be easier to tell if we were doing more PCR tests... 7/12
*If* any/all of BA.12.1, BA4. BA.5 take off here, we'll likely see new wave of infections - perhaps similar in size to prev Omicron waves but hopefully fewer admissions & deaths (esp cos of 4th dose in >75s).
These are not (as far as we know) super scary new variants BUT 8/12
A new wave would still add strain again to NHS, still disrupt education (and in exam season) and workplaces and we would likely see a few hundred more thousand *more* people developing Long Covid. Not good. 9/12
And what *is* concerning about Omicron is that compared to prev variants, immunity is not that long lived & it gives less protection againts non-Omicron variants.
An Omicron-specific booster was no better than the existing booster, so a new Omicron vax unlikely to help. 10/12
So until a new variant emerges (also not great), we might get repeated waves of Omicron variants every 4-6 months - each causing disruption & illness.
I think we can & should mitigate this with ventilation, testing, supported isolation if +ve, masks during peaks etc etc. 11/12
In the meantime it's wait and see for these Omicron subvariants in the UK. Even if they keep growing, won't see any impact on overall numbers for several weeks.
🧵I was on GMB this morning responding to Katherine Birbalsingh's comments that girls aren't choosing physics at A-Level because they don't like the hard maths and are more empathetic than boys...
I had a *lot* more to say but sadly didn't get time.
First - she said at the session that she'd never looked at A-level choice differences by gender *until the day before* and *had no idea*. How can she then *possibly know* why girls aren't choosing physics?
Doesn't stop her resorting to lazy gender stereotypes though. 2/14
It cannot be about the difficulty of maths when girls do equally well in maths as boys at both GCSE & A-level & more girls do maths than physics at A-Level (her school 59% maths vs 16% physics girls).
The maths in Physics A-Level *cannot* be harder than in Maths A-Level! 3/14
Common narrative is that freedom day & policy decisions since then paid off.
They did not for the NHS or those needing its care.
NHS had 2 short breaks to catch its breath & try to work through its backlog. But since July, there has been no break. Just growing backlogs. 1/4
Of course it's not all Covid - years of underfunding & staff shortages have made things worse. But 2 devastating Covid waves traumatised staff, caused staff illness, increased waiting lists...
Now with Omicron, more and more staff off sick, more in-hospital transmission 2/4
NHS has been in a permanent winter since "freedom day" - all after the toughest 15 months of its life.
NHS warning that right now they *cannot promise to treat you quickly in an emergency*. Meanwhile, waiting lists grow. Diagnoses are delayed. This is NOT sustainable. 3/4
It's nothing radical - it's asking employers to live up to their legal requirements for safe work places.
It also reassures customers and visitors that they are at less risk in your buildings.
Why does it matter? Here are some charts! 2/8
UK has one of lowest sick pay rates in Europe - so many - particularly those on low incomes - who are sick (for whatever reason, inc Covid) are forced to work when sick. 3/8
Vax: we're hardly doing any 1st, 2nd or 3rd doses. Even though only 57% of pop are boosted.
Spring booster programme for 75+ & immuno-suppressed *has* started - so far 12% have had their 4th dose. It basically resets you to just after booster dose. nej.md/3Kix9S5 2/8
How much Covid? more than ever...
England now highest ever, Wales already there, Scotland *might* be coming down and NI staying high for ages.
For Eng, highest in SW & primary school kids, but rising in all ages & regions.