Mutant British variant of coronavirus ‘is probably already in the US’

The mutant British strain of coronavirus is probably already in the United States and could even have originated there, scientists have said. 

The new strain – feared to be 70 per cent more transmissible and to spread more easily among children – has led to calls for the US to impose a travel ban on Britain, as dozens of countries including Canada have already done. 

But Scott Gottlieb, a former head of the FDA, told CNBC that the new strain ‘is already in the US’ and that a travel ban would not keep it out. ‘As the virus continues to spread around the world, we’re going to start to see more of these variants,’ he warned.    

New York governor Andrew Cuomo also said he believed the new strain had reached the US, while Dr Anthony Fauci said that ‘you really need to assume it’s here already’. 

‘I would not be surprised at all if it’s already here,’ Fauci told Good Morning America – saying that compulsory testing might be needed to fly to the US but that banning travel completely would be a ‘rather dramatic step’. 

Dr Shira Doron, an epidemiologist in Boston, told NBC10 that she ‘can’t imagine it wouldn’t be’ in the United States already. ‘Would I expect to see that variance in the US? Of course. People are traveling all the time. I would expect to see that,’ she said. 

Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Georgetown Center for Global Health Science and Security, said it would ‘not shock me at all to find out’ that the strain is already in the US. 

‘I don’t think a travel ban is going to be particularly helpful. We already have out-of-control transmission of all the variants that are circulating in the US here,’ she said. ‘It makes sense that it was detected first in the UK because they have probably the world’s best surveillance program.’

Jeremy Luban, a University of Massachusetts virologist, told the Washington Post that the new strain ‘may have even started here’ – suggesting it might have been detected in Britain first because the UK has a genome sequencing program hailed as the ‘best in the world’ compared to the ‘sporadic’ one in the US.  

‘It may very well be here. It may have even started here. The sequencing in the US is so sporadic,’ he said.  

A scientist on the UK’s advisory panel, Calum Semple, warned on Monday that the new mutation was likely to become the dominant strain around the world – predicting that it would ‘out-compete’ other forms of the virus.  

The mutation has been blamed by UK politicians for a resurgence in cases in the south of England which seemed to defy a November lockdown. But other experts have played down concerns, saying the 70 per cent claim is unproven.  

Britain’s infection rate, in yellow, has rebounded sharply since the end of a national lockdown at the start of December – a resurgence blamed on the new variant of Covid-19 which has left the UK isolated by a series of travel bans. The US infection rate is still higher than in Britain, with some scientists and politicians saying America should also stop flights from the UK 

Outside the UK, cases of the new strain have already been identified in Denmark, Gibraltar, the Netherlands, Australia and Italy, with experts saying it is probably already in the US too

Outside the UK, cases of the new strain have already been identified in Denmark, Gibraltar, the Netherlands, Australia and Italy, with experts saying it is probably already in the US too 

Scott Gottlieb, a former head of the FDA, told CNBC that the new strain 'is already in the US' and that a travel ban would not keep it out

Scott Gottlieb, a former head of the FDA, told CNBC that the new strain ‘is already in the US’ and that a travel ban would not keep it out

Fauci says Americans WILL start receiving a COVID-19 vaccine by early spring 

Dr Anthony Fauci said on Monday that the general American public will likely begin receiving the Covid-19 vaccine by early spring. 

It contradicted a prediction by Joe Biden’s nominee for US surgeon-general that the shot would not be available until mid-summer or early fall.

Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Health and Infectious Diseases, conceded that it would take several months before the vast majority of the country’s population is immunized.

Dr Fauci said that the general American public will likely begin receiving the Covid-19 vaccine by early spring

Dr Fauci said that the general American public will likely begin receiving the Covid-19 vaccine by early spring

‘I think people are getting a little confused about when they can expect [the vaccine]. If you start vaccinating parts of the general public in April, by the time you get to the end of August … that’s when we should see an overwhelming majority,’ Fauci told the Daily Beast.

‘That’s if you vaccinate very aggressively in May, June and July,’ he added. 

Biden nominee Dr Vivek Murthy had said that ‘it may be closer to mid-summer or early fall when this vaccine makes its way to the general population’. 

Fauci said on GMA today that he would be getting the Moderna vaccine, adding that ‘I feel very good about it’.

‘It’s sort of a double positive – one, in general, I want to symbolize to people the importance that everyone gets vaccinated who can get vaccinated – but also, it’s a good feeling of accomplishment because this [originated] in laboratories in my institute,’ he said. 

Fauci, who said he hoped president-elect Joe Biden would get more people to wear masks, also made a last-minute Christmas plea for people to minimize travel and hold small-scale gatherings – saying that ‘we really do need to hang in there… we’re in a precarious situation. The end is in sight.’  

Monday marked the second week of the Pfizer vaccine roll-out across the country, and the first round of shipments of the Moderna vaccine after it was given approval by US regulators. 

Millions of frontline healthcare workers, including those working in long-term care facilities, have been lined up to receive the first doses. 

 

At a briefing on Monday, UK scientists said the potential vulnerability of children ‘might explain a significant proportion’ of the overall rise in cases. In England’s most recent national lockdown, schools stayed open while shops, bars and restaurants all closed. 

The coronavirus has long been seen as ‘not as efficient in infecting children as it was in adults’. But scientists believe the new strain may have changed this.    

‘There is a hint that it has a higher propensity to infect children,’ said Neil Ferguson, an epidemiologist at University College London and member of an advisory panel. 

‘We haven’t established any sort of causality on that, but we can see it in the data,’ Ferguson said. ‘We will need to gather more data to see how it behaves going forward.’ 

He added: ‘What we’ve seen is, during the lockdown in England we saw a general distribution of the virus towards children, and that was true in the variant and the non-variant, and it is what we would expect, given that we had locked down which reduced adult contact but schools were still open. 

‘But what we’ve seen over the course of a five or six-week period is consistently the proportion of [cases] for the variant in under-15s was statistically significantly higher than the non-variant virus. We are still investigating the significance of that.’  

Another UK scientist, Professor Wendy Barclay of Imperial College London, said the new virus might ‘put children on a more level playing field’ compared to adults. 

The UK government believes the new variant may explain why cases kept rising in parts of England even during the November lockdown.

Since the lockdown ended, cases have risen again across the country – leading to tough new restrictions and this week’s rush to shut down flights.   

Belgian virologist Marc van Ranst warned that ‘this variant has already spread more than we think’, telling Bloomberg that it was not ‘completely fair’ to slap travel bans on the UK simply because its advanced genome sequencing had detected the mutation first. 

Cuomo said on Monday that the new strain was ‘another disaster waiting to happen’ after New York was hit hard by the first wave of the pandemic in the spring.

‘When you do not require flights from the UK to be tested, you are allowing thousands of UK passengers to arrive here every day,’ Cuomo said. ‘Based on New York’s experience in the spring, I believe this new, highly contagious strain of Covid-19 is already here,’ he added. 

Virgin Atlantic, British Airways and Delta Airlines have already agreed to test all passengers for Covid-19 prior to boarding UK flights for New York. 

The White House coronavirus task force is also considering a new rule that would require all passengers arriving from the UK to have a negative test within 72 hours of departure.  

Canada has already imposed a 72-hour ban on arrivals from the UK, making it one of more than 40 countries to have shut down travel from Britain.  

Outside the UK, cases of the new strain have already been identified in Denmark, Gibraltar, the Netherlands, Australia and Italy. 

Germany’s RKI health institute said today it was highly likely that the mutation was already in the country, although it had not been detected yet. 

France, which closed its border to lorries on Sunday as well as cars and passenger transport, said there was no evidence so far that the strain was circulating there. 

The countries shown here have already imposed travel bans on Britain, leaving it isolated after it sounded the alarm over the new variant on Saturday

The countries shown here have already imposed travel bans on Britain, leaving it isolated after it sounded the alarm over the new variant on Saturday 

More than 40 countries including all of Britain's closest neighbours in Europe have already imposed travel bans (pictured are passengers at Gatwick Airport near London)

More than 40 countries including all of Britain’s closest neighbours in Europe have already imposed travel bans (pictured are passengers at Gatwick Airport near London) 

Covid deaths rise in 19 states, with California hospitals at their limit  

The Covid-19 death rate is rising in 19 states, with average daily fatalities reaching a record of 2,361 across the United States in the last week, data shows.  

Hospitals in California are at breaking point with only 30 intensive care unit beds reported in Los Angeles county Monday, according to the Covid Tracking Project. 

Some 18,359 people are hospitalized with the virus across the state. Just two months ago, there were a total of 2,291 patients, including 657 in ICU.

A California state model forecasts that the total could hit 75,000 patients by mid-January. 

Los Angeles County’s health services director, Dr. Christina Ghaly, said plans for rationing care are not in place yet, but they need to be established because ‘the worst is yet to come’. 

States including New York, Texas and Delaware are showing rising seven-day average death tolls compared with last week. For Delaware they are up 139 per cent; Alabama 58 per cent and California 43 per cent.

The US recorded 1,485 Covid deaths and 178,000 cases on Monday, while a record total of 115,351 people are currently hospitalized with the virus. 

The hurry to shut down flights came after UK prime minister Boris Johnson sounded the alarm over the new strain at a Saturday press conference.   

Blaming the threat of the mutant virus, Johnson put millions of people back into lockdown in England and drastically tightened Christmas rules for others.

Johnson said the UK was ‘fairly certain the variant is transmitted more quickly, saying that ‘it may be up to 70 per cent more transmissible than the old variant’.   

Peter Horby, the chair of the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (NERVTAG), said scientists have ‘high confidence that this variant does have a transmission advantage over other virus variants that are currently in the UK’. 

A NERVTAG paper suggested that the R rate could increase by 0.4 or more – with the figure already above the threshold of 1 which signals that the outbreak is growing. 

The panel expressed ‘moderate confidence’ that the variant known as VUI-202012/01 ‘demonstrates a substantial increase in transmissibility compared to other variants. 

Scientists said the new variant had swiftly become the dominant strain in the south of England – accounting for 60 per cent of cases in London – and could soon do the same across the country. 

UK health secretary Matt Hancock said the new strain is ‘out of control’ in the parts of Britain, including London, which are now back in lockdown. 

To add to the misery in Britain, the border closures have caused massive queues of lorries unable to get into France, causing concerns about food supplies.  

However, politicians and scientists have said there is no evidence that the new strain is more deadly, or that it could interfere with the vaccines already developed. 

‘There’s zero evidence that there’s any increase in severity’ from the lat est strain, the WHO’s emergencies chief Dr Michael Ryan said on Monday. 

Dr Fauci echoed the finding, also made by the German government, that there is no indication of a threat to the vaccine’s effectiveness. 

‘Having said all of that, when you’re dealing with mutations, you have to follow them very closely and don’t take them lightly,’ Fauci said. 

Today, the head of German firm BioNTech – which co-produced the world’s first approved vaccine with Pfizer – said he was confident that the jab would work against the UK variant. 

‘Scientifically, it is highly likely that the immune response by this vaccine also can deal with the new virus variants,’ said Ugur Sahin, adding that the proteins in the UK variant were 99 per cent the same as other strains. 

Should the vaccine need to be adjusted for the new variant, this could be done in about six weeks, Sahin said, although regulators might have to approve the changes before the shots can be used.  

Fears over the possible impact of the new variant on the United States come with deaths rising in 19 states and hospitals close to capacity in California

Fears over the possible impact of the new variant on the United States come with deaths rising in 19 states and hospitals close to capacity in California

Just like Britain, South Africa has seen a resurgence in coronavirus cases which it has linked to a new strain which is similar but different to the UK variant

Just like Britain, South Africa has seen a resurgence in coronavirus cases which it has linked to a new strain which is similar but different to the UK variant 

A paper released by a scientific advisory panel in the UK which expressed ‘moderate confidence’ that the new variant shows a ‘substantial increase in transmissibility compared to other variants’   

Admiral Brett Giroir, the US assistant secretary for health, said the new strain ‘has become of concern because it is becoming the dominant variant in the UK’. 

‘The inference is that because it is the dominant variant, it may be more transmissible – and that may be true. It has not been proven but it may be true,’ he told CNN. 

A top German virologist, Christian Drosten, suggested yesterday that the 70 per cent claim had been overblown by politicians and was unproven. After seeing more detailed evidence, he said that ‘cases with the mutant strain are only rising in areas where the overall infection rate is high or rising’.

Dr Mark Siedner, an epidemiologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, told NBC it was ‘simply too early to tell whether this is more contagious’, adding: ‘We really don’t know if this is the chicken or the egg, the causation or the correlation.’ 

Another UK virologist, Professor Mark Harris, accused the UK government of using the new variant as a ‘smokescreen’ for its failure to bring infections under control.  

In addition to all of this, South Africa also says it has identified its own new variant which it it is likewise blaming for a rebound in the infection rate. 

South African health authorities said the new variant seemed to spread faster than the previous iteration, but it is not the same strain as the British one. 

‘In the UK they have also identified a new variant… there are quite a few similarities between the two lineages… there are also a similar number of mutations’ said Professor Tulio de Oliviera, a member of South Africa’s genomics consortium. 

South Africa’s infection rate has more than doubled over the past two weeks, from 6.47 new cases per 100,000 people two weeks ago to 14.68 on Sunday. 

Some Covid-19 vaccines, including the one developed by Oxford University and AstraZeneca, are undergoing clinical tests in South Africa. 

While it is generally assumed the new strain originated in Britain, some scientists have argued that this might simply reflect the UK’s better monitoring systems. 

Boris Johnson boasted on Saturday that Britain ‘has by far the best genomic sequencing ability in the world, which means we are better able to identify new strains like this than any other country’.  

Calum Semple, the scientist on the UK’s advisory panel, said there were likely to be more variations as the virus comes under ‘pressure’ from vaccines and widespread immunity. 

‘The fact is we’ve identified it, we’ve brought it to national attention, we’ve got the attention of the politicians and the World Health Organisation in very quick time,’ he told Sky News.  

Virus mutations are common, and have been occurring throughout the pandemic in a process which is ‘natural and expected’, the WHO said.   

‘Most of the mutations are trivial. It’s the change of one or two letters in the genetic alphabet that doesn’t make much difference in the ability to cause disease,’ said Dr Philip Landrigan, a former CDC scientist.

However, the current mutation has many mutations – nearly two dozen – of which eight are on the spike protein that the virus uses to infect cells.  

Contradicting some scientists, Landrigan said it would be ‘very, very sensible to restrict travel’ from the UK in order to slow the spread of the new strain.  

UK prime minister Boris Johnson at the Saturday press conference where he sounded the alarm over the new variant, putting much of the country including London back in lockdown

UK prime minister Boris Johnson at the Saturday press conference where he sounded the alarm over the new variant, putting much of the country including London back in lockdown 

Engineers and volunteers stand outside a mobile field hospital at the UCI Medical Center in Orange, California on Monday. The number of people hospitalized across California with confirmed COVID-19 infections is more than double the state's previous peak, reached in July, and a state model forecasts the total could hit 75,000 patients by mid-January

Engineers and volunteers stand outside a mobile field hospital at the UCI Medical Center in Orange, California on Monday. The number of people hospitalized across California with confirmed COVID-19 infections is more than double the state’s previous peak, reached in July, and a state model forecasts the total could hit 75,000 patients by mid-January

A graph by the Covid Tracking Project shows 18,359 people are hospitalized with the virus in California

A graph by the Covid Tracking Project shows 18,359 people are hospitalized with the virus in California

The US recorded 1,485 COVID deaths Monday; a record total of 115,351 people are hospitalized with the virus

The US recorded 1,485 COVID deaths Monday; a record total of 115,351 people are hospitalized with the virus

Fears over the possible impact in America come with deaths rising in 19 states and hospitals close to capacity in California. 

Data from the Covid Tracking Project shows 18,359 people in hospital in California as of Monday, with only 30 intensive care beds said to be available in Los Angeles. 

All of Southern California and the 12-county San Joaquin Valley to the north have been out of regular ICU capacity for days. 

Los Angeles County’s health services director, Dr Christina Ghaly, said plans for rationing care need to be established because ‘the worst is yet to come’.  

A document recently circulated among LA hospitals said that instead of trying to save every life, the goal could shift to saving as many as possible – meaning those less likely to survive would not get the same kind of care. 

‘Some compromise of standard of care is unavoidable,’ warned a document obtained by the Los Angeles Times. 

‘It is not that an entity, system or locale chooses to limit resources, it is that the resources are clearly not available to provide care in a regular manner.’ 

California’s death toll is up by 43 per cent in the last week, while in Alabama it has risen by 58 per cent and in Delaware by 139 per cent.   

Across the country, the US recorded 1,485 deaths and 178,000 cases on Monday, while a record total of 115,351 people are currently hospitalized with the virus. 

Also on Monday, president-elect Joe Biden received his first dose of the vaccine on live television as part of a growing effort to convince people the jabs are safe. 

Biden, 78, took a dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine at a hospital not far from his Delaware home, hours after his wife, Jill Biden, did the same. 

The injections came the same day that a second vaccine, produced by Moderna, will start arriving in states. 

Ilhan Omar slams ‘disturbing’ younger lawmakers like fellow squad member AOC for getting vaccine before over-65s and frontline workers 

By Nikki Schwab, Senior US Political Reporter for DailyMail.com

Rep. Ilhan Omar called it ‘disturbing’ that her fellow lawmakers, including her 31-year-old ‘squad’-mate Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, were able to get vaccinated against the coronavirus before frontline workers and the elderly. 

‘It’s now clear that we don’t have enough vaccines for everybody and there is a shortage of supply, we have to prioritize those who need it most,’ Omar tweeted Sunday. ‘That’s why it’s disturbing to see members be first to get vaccine while most frontline workers, elderly and infirm in our districts, wait.’ 

Omar linked to an interview she did earlier in the month on CNN, when she had argued the same thing when early reports said White House staff would have access to the COVID-19 vaccine before most Americans. 

Rep. Ilhan Omar called it 'disturbing' that members of Congress were getting the coronavirus vaccine before frontline workers and the elderly

Rep. Ilhan Omar called it ‘disturbing’ that members of Congress were getting the coronavirus vaccine before frontline workers and the elderly 

Omar tweeted her disgust Sunday, linking to a CNN interview she did earlier in the months when she argued White House staff also shouldn't get the vaccine first

Omar tweeted her disgust Sunday, linking to a CNN interview she did earlier in the months when she argued White House staff also shouldn’t get the vaccine first 

Among the lawmakers to get the COVID-19 vaccine was 31-year-old 'squad' member, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who documented the experience on her Instagram

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (bottom) flashes a peace sign and is surrounded by Sen. James Lankford (left), Rep. Jamie Raskin (center), and Rep. Rashida Tlaib (right)

Among the lawmakers to get the COVID-19 vaccine was 31-year-old ‘squad’ member, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who documented the experience on her Instagram 

‘Our frontline workers who’ve made the sacrifice to make the country run should be the priority, people who’ve been disproportionately impacted should be the priority,’ she said then. 

President Donald Trump later tweeted that he believed White House staff shouldn’t get the vaccine before other, more vulnerable segments of the U.S. population. 

Those in the U.S. government began getting the Pfizer Friday, with Vice President Mike Pence getting the first injection alongside his wife Karen and Surgeon General Jerome Adams. 

Later in the day, both House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell got the vaccine.   

Those in leadership weren’t the only members of Congress able to get the vaccine – it was made available to everyone. 

Ocasio-Cortez explained that she was able to get vaccinated ahead of most Americans because of the government's 'continuity of governance' plan

Ocasio-Cortez explained that she was able to get vaccinated ahead of most Americans because of the government’s ‘continuity of governance’ plan 

Ocasio-Cortez, who will be the youngest member of Congress until Republican Madison Cawthorn gets sworn-in in January, detailed getting the vaccine on her Instagram story. 

AOC said she found out she and other members of Congress would have access to the vaccine because of the ‘continuity of governance’ plan, ‘basically a national security measure,’ she explained to her Instagram followers.  

Republicans, including Sen. Marco Rubio who downplayed the virus and attended President Donald Trump’s packed rallies, also went ahead and got the vaccine. 

CNN commentator Ana Navarro-Cardenas lashed out at Rubio for being among those to get vaccinated first.  

‘Young, healthy Senator, who spoke at rallies packed w/thousands w/o masks, who supports Trump -who’s down-played COVID & mocked those who wear masks, is 1st to get vaccine while most medical workers, elderly & infirm Americans, wait, Navarro Cardenas tweeted. ‘Congratulations on ur privilege, @marcorubio.’ 

But not every Republican lined up to get vaccinated. 

Sen. Rand Paul, who had COVID-19 in March, said he should be among the last to get a vaccine – and knocked Ocasio-Cortez for getting it. 

‘I think it would be unconscionable for somebody who’s had it to get in front of somebody who hasn’t had it to take a vaccine,’ Paul told reporters on Capitol Hill Monday. ‘I think it’s unconscionable for AOC, who’s 30 years old, to be smiling gleefully and getting the vaccine when you got 85-year-old people in nursing homes who haven’t gotten it.’ 

After speaking with reporters, Paul also tweeted this point. 

‘I was asked about getting vaccinated with others in Congress: It is inappropriate for me – who has already gotten the virus/has immunity – to get in front of elderly/healthcare workers,’ he wrote. ‘Same goes for AOC or any young healthy person. They should be among last, not first.’ 

In June, Omar lost her father, Nur Omar Mohamed, to complications from COVID-19. 

More recently she’s been critical of the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic when speaking about her father’s death. 

‘My father and over 300,000 people have lost their lives because of dangerous criminal neglect by Trump and his administration. My father should be here today. So many of our family members should be here today and they’re not here with us because we have leaders who didn’t care about their lives,’ she said last week in an interview with MSNBC. 

‘The president, to this day, has not shown an ounce of compassion to the people who have passed away,’ she said. ‘He has still not acknowledged the devastating loss, so many of us are feeling.’   

She said the administration’s failures should be investigated.  

‘We have to investigate and prosecute these people who are responsible for these reckless deaths,’ Omar said. 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk