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You’d be forgiven for thinking humanity is splitting into two groups: those who still consider covid when planning the future for their business, and those who think it’s all over. The smart money is on the former group, the people to whom covid still matters, employee safety still matters, and the health of all the people who interact with the business is still taken into account.
At the same time it can be tricky to do the right thing when we’re not being led from above. The government isn’t talking about covid at the moment, and hasn’t talked about it for some time, but thankfully scientists know better.
If you’d rather follow the science than trust politicians, you’ll want to keep ahead of the progress of covid’s autumn wave and do what’s necessary to make sure you don’t play a part in spreading the virus further than it has to. Here’s the news.
The winter covid wave is here – and people are allowed to go into work with covid
A surge in cases reveals there’s a new wave underway in the UK, along with warnings by experts that covid will put terrible pressure on the NHS this winter. If you believe you have covid symptoms, NHS advice is to take a lateral flow test then isolate at home for five days if you test positive, also taking particular care not to infect vulnerable people for 10 days after a positive result.
At the same time, even though the threat from covid is still very real, people are turning up at work with it. While you’re allowed to go into work when you’ve tested positive for covid, and there is no legal obligation to tell your employer if you’re infected, in our opinion it’s madness to put others at risk by taking the virus into work with you, and worse still not even telling anyone you’re positive. You’ll just end up spreading it to your colleagues, who’ll take it back home with them to infect others.
The government’s advice is one thing, but common sense is another. We highly recommend you fit our tech to make sure the people who work at your place – and visit it – can feel safe.
Care homes suffer needlessly when our tech can save them time and money
It’s shocking. This sentence appeared in an article in the Daily Mirror this week:
“One of the biggest challenges is care homes will not take medically-fit Covid patients until they test negative. It can also take four to six hours to fumigate a room that had a Covid patient in.
The article went on to say, “Staff are already having to masterfully move patients around like chess pieces to free up beds for those most in need... sometimes you’ve got to fumigate them which can take hours.’”
This is terrible to hear when our affordable, simple-to-fit machines disinfect a room in just a few minutes, leaving every surface the light touches free from covid and safe from a load of other pathogens as well.
The latest on covid subvariants BQ. 1 and BQ .1.1.
Two new omicron subvariants, BQ.1 and BQ.1.1, are quickly gaining traction in the USA, accounting for 27% of infections on 29th October 2022. They’ve also turned up in the UK and several countries in the EU. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) has already classified BQ.1 as a ‘variant of interest’. They say by week 2 November the two new variants will be responsible for over half of new covid infections, and 80% of them by New Year. So what’s the latest insight into the new variants?
So far BQ.1.1 seems highly transmissible. The data from some countries reveals it is probably more transmissible than other current variants. The ECDC thinks the increase in the growth rate of BQ.1 is driven mainly by immune escape, with the virus able to invade our immune response despite previous infections and vaccinations.
BQ.1 comes with new mutations called K444T, N460K, L452R and F486V. BQ.1.1 contains an extra mutation, R346T, which is also found in the BA.5 variant. These mutations are associated with ‘significant immune escape and antibody evasion’.
One study reveals it’s likely the immunity people get from previous omicron sub-lineages, and from vaccination, will not give us broad protection against reinfection by BQ.1.1, but the study hasn’t been peer-reviewed yet.
It’s already clear the new variants have the highest capacity for immune evasion yet. On the bright side there’s no evidence that BQ.1 causes more severe illness than BA.4 and BA.5 but on the downside, one recent study shows BQ.1.1 could be resistant to one of the antibody therapies that protects vulnerable people.
Please keep people safe at your place
It makes sense in a business context to keep your employees safe from infection, and your customers. But it’s also the decent thing to do to keep millions of others safe from potential new variants that can only develop if covid is left to spread willy-nilly. So ask us about our covid killing tech – we’ll be pleased to help and it
costs nothing to get a quote.