April 26, 2024

Alberta can start ‘significantly relaxing’ COVID-19 rules once hospitalizations dip: Kenney – National | Globalnews.ca

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says he believes the province should be able to start “significantly relaxing” public health measures once hospitalizations from the Omicron variant of COVD-19 decrease.

In an interview with The West Block‘s Mercedes Stephenson, airing in full on Sunday, Kenney said he expects the severity of the virus will only decrease in future variants that may emerge.

“Once we start to see sustainable reduction in our hospitalizations from Omicron, then I think we can move to begin significantly relaxing public health measures,” Kenney said.

“And if Omicron acts like, for example, the Spanish flu or any other similar contagious viral respiratory virus, I think we can expect to see decreasing severity in future variants, which should bode well for the future.”

He added that he believes, “we have to just learn to live with this.”

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‘Difficult to say’ whether Omicron will lead to end of COVID-19 pandemic: PHAC

Kenney pointed to an article in The Lancet medical journal earlier in the week, which looked at indications from South Africa that reinfections after an individual gets the Omicron variant may be milder than the initial infection.

That article suggested individuals infected with Omicron went on to have “a significantly reduced odds of severe disease compared with individuals infected earlier with the delta variant.”

However, a commentary published by other researchers in response argued the experience of South Africa, which has a demographically young population, won’t necessarily be the same elsewhere.

“This report of typically milder disease following infection with the omicron versus delta variant in South Africa is encouraging, but we should not assume that omicron variant epidemics will have such a low health effect elsewhere,” the commentary in The Lancet noted.

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What will it take to go from pandemic to endemic?

The question of whether the highly-infectious Omicron variant will begin to shift the pandemic towards an endemic state has dominated conversations among scientists and public health experts over the past month as the variant fuelled new spikes and case records around the world.

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“It is highly transmissible and less virulent. That’s the perfect mix,” infectious disease specialist Dr. Gerald Evans said in an interview with Global News two weeks ago.

Because it is more transmissible, that means it can “outcompete the other viruses,” like the more deadly Delta strain, pushing them further and further out of the picture.

It also ticks the second box when it comes to endemicity, according to Evans: Omicron “produces a milder form of illness.”

“For any virus to become endemic, it cannot be killing off the population of hosts that it infects,” Evans said.

Altogether, Omicron is “rapidly increasing” the amount of immunity around the world, Evans added, “especially” when combined with vaccination.


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Could Omicron help turn pandemic into endemic?


Could Omicron help turn pandemic into endemic? – Jan 4, 2022

However, Canada’s deputy chief public health officer, Dr. Howard Njoo, has urged caution.

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“We know that for Omicron, we could have some immunity for some time. But it doesn’t protect against other variants and virus strains — so it can help a little bit for some time, but it’s not a long-term herd immunity,” Njoo explained.

“With vaccination, we know that (vaccines) are very effective to protect people against severe illness but with Omicron, we’ve seen it’s not as good against infection and transmission.”

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There is also no way to rule out the potential for other, more severe variants that could emerge — particularily due to the sheer amount of people that Omicron is infecting.

Each new person infected is a new chance for the virus to mutate, the World Health Organization has cautioned.

In an interview last week with Stephenson, the WHO’s Dr. Peter Singer stressed that until more countries are able to vaccinate larger portions of their populations, the world will continue to see the emergence of new — and potentially more dangerous — variants.

“If we keep doing what we’re doing, unfortunately, it is possible — even likely — that there will be another variant and we won’t be ending the pandemic,” he said

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“In terms of what those future variants will be like, it’s very hard to know that in terms of transmissibility, in terms of virulence. But it’s certainly possible that the next one — the next letter in the Greek alphabet, by the way, is Pi —  that Pi could be worse than Omicron.

“That’s why it’s so important for us to act.”

— with files from Global’s Rachel Gilmore.


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‘Vaccinate the world’ to end emergence of variants


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