48 International TheEconomistDecember18th 2021
proteins on the virus particles’ surface.
That is why vaccines can still protect
against disease even if the antibodies they
provoke no longer recognise the pathogen
as well as they did originally, or if they have
waned over time.
That said, a better antibody response
would be nice to have; slowing the rate of
infections would slow the spread of dis
ease and give health systems breathing
space. This is where vaccine booster shots
come in. Boosters improve all forms of im
munity: one of their effects is to raise anti
body levels, at least for a while. This in
creased quantity can go some way to mak
ing up for the reduced quality of their re
sponse, lowering the risk of infection.
Boosters may improve the quality of the
antibodies, too; the more the immune sys
tem sees a virus, the better attuned to it
some antibodies become.
A reasonable expectation that vaccines
offer protection against serious disease,
especially after a third jab, is one piece of
good news. Another may be that Omicron
infection leads to less severe disease all
round. There is some evidence of this from
Gauteng, the South African province where
the variant has run rife. Data from Discov
ery Health suggest adults with Omicron
have a 29% lower hospital admission risk
relative to that seen in the country’s first
wave of covid19 in mid2020. The propor
tion of those hospitalised who end up in
intensive care is much lower than in previ
ous waves, too, and fewer of those on gen
eral wards need supplemental oxygen. An
gelique Coetzee of the South African Medi
cal Association, who was one of the first to
raise the alarm about Omicron, has consis
tently argued that it is a milder variant.
A paper recently submitted for peer re
view by Michael Chan and colleagues at
Hong Kong University suggests one reason
why this might be. They found that in the
first few days of infection Omicron repro
duced 70 times more readily than Delta in
the airways leading to the lungs. But in the
lungs themselves it reproduced ten times
less well than earlier variants.
The details of how viruses cause disease
depend on a lot more than simple repro
ductive rates. But this finding might go
some way to explaining a lower incidence
of severe disease; it is infection in the
lungs that does most damage. And greater
replication higher up the respiratory tract
might improve transmissibility. Being very
good at getting into, and reproducing in,
the lining of the airways could make it eas
ier for the virus to set up shop in someone
exposed to it. What is more, a lot of activity
in the airways might also mean more parti
cles get back out into the air. Indications
that the symptoms of Omicron infection
are more like those of the common cold
might fit with this interpretation.
But neither that laboratory work nor the
datafromSouthAfricaamounttoa strong
casethatOmicronwillbea lotlessdanger
ousthanearlierstrainseverywhere.The
SouthAfricandataarepreliminary;sofar
theycoveronlythefirstthreeweeksafter
infection.Typically,newwaves ofcovid
variantsstartinyoungergroupsandwork
theirwayintoolder,morevulnerablepop
ulationsovertime.Andtheratesatwhich
infectionleadstoseverediseaseanddeath
candifferbetweencountriesandpopula
tions.Factorsatplaybeyondtheyouthof
theSouthAfricansmightincludethefact
thatmostvaccinationsinthecountryare
relatively recentandthefactthatafair
number have been previously infected.
Theremay also besalient factorsstem
mingfromgeneticvariationorpriorhealth
histories.Thingscouldlookquitedifferent
in older populations elsewhere in the
worldwhichhaveseenfewerinfections.
Dacapo,moltovivace
Thedegreetowhichthevariantcaninfect
the previously infected may also make
thingslookrosierthantheyreallyare.Nat
alieDean,a biostatisticianatEmoryUni
versity,pointsoutthat Omicron’ssuccess
atreinfectingpeoplemaygivetheimpres
siona smallerfractiongetsseverelyilljust
byinflatingthedenominator.Itcouldthus
seemmorebenignevenif,amongthose
contractingcovidforthefirsttime,itwere
justasdangerousasDelta(seechart).
Asthedebateaboutthecomparativese
verity of the infectiongoes on,public
health officials are stressing that what
matterstotheindividualandtothehealth
systemarenotallthatwellaligned.Foran
individual,a lessdeadlyvariantisprefera
bletoa moredeadlyone,regardlessofhow
transmissibleitmaybe.Fora healthsys
tem,thenumberofcasesatanygiventime
isa criticalconcern,whichmakestherate
oftransmissioncruciallyimportant.There
isa levelbeyondwhichthesystemcannot
copewiththenumberofhospitalisations.
Afastspreadingviruscanreachthatlevel
evenifitproducesa lowerproportionof
severecasessimplybecausethetotalnum
berofcasesatanygiventimeissohigh.
Toprovidea senseofthis,researchersat
theLondonSchoolofHygieneandTropical
Medicinehavecomparedmodelsforthe
spreadofOmicronwiththesituationin
Englandduringtheworstpreviouspeak,in
early2021.Oftheirvariousscenarios,the
onewhichcurrentlylooksmostplausible
makes Omicronprettygoodatinfecting
peoplewhohavebeenvaccinatedorinfect
edbutalsotreatsboostersasbeingquite
goodatstoppingit.Thatwouldproducea
peakinhospitaladmissionsinlateJanuary
welloverthe3,800a dayseenin2021.It
would lead to 23m30m infections be
tween now andMay 2022, and 37,000
53,000deaths.Modelsfromthesameteam
have,inthepast,provedoverlygloomy,but
theybelievetheyunderstandwhyandhave
madeappropriateadjustments.
The prospectof hospitalisation rates
thathighsawEnglandgointotwonational
lockdowns, one in November 2020 and
oneinJanuary2021.Thistimethegovern
ment has recommended working from
homeandreintroducedsomeinfection
controlmeasures,suchasmaskwearing
on public transport. It may introduce
more.Itsgreateststress,though,isona
hellforleather dash to provide booster
shotstoalladultsbyJanuary1st.
Ina reportpublishedonDecember15th
theEuropeanCentreforDiseasePreven
tionandControlwarnedthata rangeofen
hancedprecautionswerenownecessary,
including reducedcontact insocial and
work settings, fewer large gatherings,
moremaskwearingandmoretesting.Re
ducingtravelandmixingbetweenhouse
holdsandgenerations overtheholidays
mayalsobeonthecards.Somecountries
are sure to seetoughermeasures soon;
someindividualsarealreadytakingthem.
Butif theperceptionthatOmicronisnotso
dangerous—whether well founded or
not—becomeswidespread,peoplemaysee
littlereasontoadheretostricterrules.
CountrieswhereOmicronratesarestill
verylowhavea littlemoretimetoprepare,
tolearnfromthosefurtheralongthecurve,
andtoestimatewhatisnecessarytoflatten
andlowerthepeak.Butthegrowthrates
seensofarstronglysuggestthattimeis
bestmeasuredindays,maybeweeks.Ex
ponentialgrowthisa dizzyingthing.n
Selection eects
Covid-19 infections by severity and re-infection
capacity, illustrative example
Sourc: NatalieDean,EmoryUniversity,Atlanta
Severe Severe
Not
Severe
Symptoms
Susceptible
population
Previously
infected
population
Infection
averted
Moderate
Mild
Asymptomatic
Variant with little capacity for re-infection
Severe
Not
Severe
Severe
Symptoms
Infection
averted
Re-infected
Moderate
Mild
Asymptomatic
Susceptible
population
Previously
infected
population
Variant with high capacity for re-infection