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Explainer: What Is The COVID BA.5 Variant And Why Is It Reinfecting So Many People?






PARIS, France - BA.5, part of the Omicron family, is the latest coronavirus variant to cause widespread waves of infection globally.


According to the World Health Organization's most recent report, it was behind 52% of cases sequenced in late June, up from 37% in one week. In the United States, it is estimated to be causing around 65% of infections.



RISING CASE NUMBERS



BA.5 is not new. First identified in January, it has been tracked by the WHO since April.


It is a sister variant of the Omicron strain that has been dominant worldwide since the end of 2021, and has already caused spikes rates - even with reduced testing - in countries including in South Africa, where it was first found, as well as the United Kingdom, parts of Europe, and Australia.


Coronavirus cases worldwide have not been rising for four weeks in a row, WHO data showed.



WHY IT IS SPREADING


Like its closely related sibling, BA.4, BA.5 is particularly good at evading the immune protection afforded either by vaccination or prior infection.


For this reason, 'BA.5 has a growth advantage over the other sublineages of Omicron that are circulating', Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO's technical lead on COVID-19, told a news briefing on Tuesday.


For many people, this means they re getting re - infected, often even a short time after having COVID-19. Van Kerkhove said the WHO is assessing reports of re - infections.


'We have ample evidence that people who've been infected with Omicron are getting infected with BA.5. No question about it', said Gregory Poland, a virologist and vaccine researcher with the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.


If that seems particularly common now, it could be simply because so many people got Omicron, researchers have suggested.


NO MORE SEVERE


While rising cases have caused more hospitalisations in some countries, deaths have not gone up dramatically.


This is largely because vaccines continue to protect against severe illness and heath, if not infection, and manufactures and regulators are also looking at tweaked vaccines that directly target the newer Omicron variants.


There is also no evidence that BA.5 is more dangerous than any of the other Omicron variants, the WHO's Van Kerkhove stressed, although spikes in cases can put health service under pressure and risk more people getting long COVID.


The WHO and other experts have also said that the ongoing pandemic - prolonged by vaccine inequity and the desire in many countries to 'move beyond' COVID-19 - would only lead to more new and unpredictable variants.

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