What’s happening to Covid?
About the Eris variant
Do you have a runny nose, a headache, mild or serious fatigue, sneezes or a sore throat? It might not be a regular summer cold. It could be Eris, the latest covid variant doing the rounds. Here’s what you need to know.
About the covid Eris variant
A new covid variant is spreading across the UK, called EG.5.1 or Eris. The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) says this relative of Omicron makes up 14.6% of new cases, now the second most prevalent variant in the UK.
The UKHSA has been monitoring Eris closely and it looks like cases are increasing internationally too, particularly in Asia where it was officially named a new variant on 31st July. So will it overtake the current most dominant strain, Arcturus XBB.1.16, which makes up just over 39% of cases at the moment?
The new Eris variant is spreading fast, which helps explain the recent hike in UK cases and hospitalisations. By September, when the schools go back, experts say it’s likely to be the dominant UK variant.
Increasing covid cases
Covid cases have been shooting up over the past week or so, with an increased covid hospital admission rate of 1.97 per 100,000 of us, up from 1.17 per 100,000 in the previous UKHSA report. There’s been an increase in hospitalisation across every age group so far, but it’s particularly affecting the elderly. As we write, Intensive Care Unit admissions haven’t gone up.
What the WHO says
The World Health Organisation began watching Eris just over two weeks ago. They say that even though people are better protected by vaccines and prior infection, we shouldn’t let down our guard. If you’re at high risk you’ll need to wear a mask in crowded places, get all your booster jabs, and make sure there’s ‘adequate ventilation indoors’. The WHO is also encouraging governments not to take down the systems they put in place to handle covid, because they’ll probably still be needed.
Is there an Eris hot-spot in the UK?
According to Sky, the south west of England has the highest infection rate at the moment. The ZOE health app is proving essential in tracking the spread, revealing around 790,000 people in the UK who use the app have symptomatic covid at the moment. ZOE data shows there’s been a 30% rise in daily cases since the start of July. Boots agrees – they’re seeing sales of covid tests up by more than a third.
In the south west of England we’re seeing anything from 931 to 1,628 new cases every day per million people, with Wales coming a close second. The lowest rates at the moment are in Yorkshire and the Humber. But because the government doesn’t fund reliable and comprehensive infection data from the Office for National Statistics any more, the data isn’t as reliable as it could be.
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