Two studies conducted in Great Britain and published Wednesday, December 22 show that infections with the Omicron variant of Covid-19 are less likely to cause hospitalizations compared to the Delta variant, confirming a trend first observed in South Africa.

These preliminary studies - one from Scotland, the other from England - were welcomed by experts, who were however cautious and pointed out that the high transmission rate of the variant could still result in more disease. severe cases.

"What we are saying is that this is good news with nuances - with nuances because these are early observations, they are statistically significant and we show a reduced risk of hospitalizations," said Scottish study co-author Jim McMenamin told reporters on a phone call.

Scottish research looked at the cases recorded in November and December, and grouped them into two groups: Delta on one side, Omicron on the other.

According to this study, "Omicron is associated with a two-thirds reduction in the risk of hospitalization for Covid-19 compared to Delta".

It has also been shown that a booster dose provides substantial additional protection against symptomatic infection.

This is a small study that did not look at anyone hospitalized and under the age of 60, but the authors said they adjusted for those limits using statistical methods.

The second study, from England, found a 20-25% reduction in any type of hospitalization for Omicron compared to Delta, and a 40-45% reduction in overnight stays (the " admissions ").

The Scottish study only looked at admissions.

The risk of infection remains very high

"While the reduction in the risk of hospitalization with the Omicron variant is reassuring, the risk of infection remains extremely high," warned Azra Ghani of Imperial College London, who co-authored the English study.

"By adding the booster dose, vaccines continue to offer the best protection against infection and hospitalization."

Neither study has yet been peer reviewed, but they add to a growing body of evidence about Omicron. It is not clear whether the decrease in the rate of severe cases observed with Omicron is due to the characteristics of the variant or if it appears less severe because it encounters populations with more immunity because of being vaccinated or having been ill with Covid. in the past.

"This news does not take away from the extraordinary spread of this variant in the population, and the fact that even a small proportion of people requiring hospital care for Covid could turn into very large numbers if the rate of community spread continues. to increase, "warned Penny Ward, professor of pharmaceutical medicine at King's College London, who was not involved in the research.

With AFP

The summary of the week

France 24 invites you to come back to the news that marked the week

I subscribe

Take international news everywhere with you!

Download the France 24 application

google-play-badge_FR