Scientists predict the future evolution of covid in 2022
As the pandemic rolls on with no real sign of slowing, the virus has been busy evolving. So what do the science people say about covid in 2022? And how do their predictions affect the appeal of our popular, highly effective covid-killing UVC robots? As it turns out, business owners will need to make every effort to keep people safe on their premises. Here’s why.
There’s no guarantee future variants will be less dangerous
So far we’ve seen numerous covid variants pop up, and there’s no reason to believe Omicron is the last one. Far from it. There’s also no scientific reason to believe the next variant of concern won’t be the most dangerous yet.
At the same time we’ve heard some people in the media talking about ‘now that covid is on the way out’ – which is certainly isn’t. We will see more variants, and they will trigger more waves around the world.
Covid’s only job is to survive
Like every virus, covid has one job and one job only – to survive whatever happens. To survive it needs to infect as many of us as it can, and that means evolving into variants that are better at spreading, more transmissible.
The original covid variant saw each infected person infecting 2-3 others. Delta infects 6-7. Omicron infects even more, and scientists are currently working on the exact number. Delta and Omicron are both better than the original variant at replicating themselves, which means infected people shed more of the virus.
Right now ‘most people in the world’ already have a degree of covid immunity thanks to past infection or vaccination. This is why the new variants we’re seeing, like Omicron, are busy trying to evolve their way out of immunity by changing the spike proteins that our antibodies target.
Is there a limit to how infectious covid can get?
There is a limit to how infectious it can get, but there’s no limit on the virus’s ability to evade the human body’s immune response. This means we could see a constant stream of new variants over the next years and even decades.
Over time the different lineages of the virus that have evolved might stick around, diverge, or go extinct. This means we’ll probably need to create different kinds of vaccinations to handle the variations, perhaps combined into one dose like the flu vaccine is.
Why covid is unlikely to evolve into something less harmful
Some say new viruses will evolve to cause milder symptoms. Sadly they’re wrong. Covid is at its most infectious just before you get symptoms, which means there’s no selective pressure for the virus to become milder. We’ve already seen this with Smallpox, a lethal disease that became worse over time, and the same goes for flu, which still comes with a worryingly high yearly death toll.
Animals are another worry
We already know the virus is circulating in various animal populations. Scientists suspect covid is circulating in a lot more species we don’t yet know about. This could generate new variants to jump back into humans.
Immunity fades with time
Immunity through illness or vaccinations fades away as time passes. If you’ve had a booster in 2021, you’re likely to need another in 2022, as the virus steadily works its way through the Greek alphabet. The next variant ‘of concern’ will be rho. Are you ready?
Are you ready for rho?
Variants come and variants go. But our reliable, affordable LED UVC light robots do a top job of destroying the virus’s DNA and RNA whatever the variant, leaving it unable to reproduce.
Our virus killing machines give businesses a powerful competitive advantage in today’s covid world. If you’d like to find out more about protecting your premises, people, visitors, suppliers and customers from current and future covid variants, get in touch.









