Omicron Variant: Covid worst is over as professor says 'it's not doubling anymore!'
DATA has been one of the keys to understanding COVID-19 since the pandemic began nearly two years ago. Case numbers, hospitalisations, infection rates. These all inform our government's response and our own. Now there's some new data from London that appears to convey some positive news.
Omicron: SAGE warning calls for policy decisions 'sooner'
Now, in a bit of festive good news, it seems there is some optimism to be seen in the data which has ramifications for the rest of the country.
According to data from the NHS, only 1.4 percent of people being infected with Omicron are finding themselves in hospital a week later.
This is a much lower rate than under the Alpha or Delta variants.
Furthermore, there is more optimistic news in the data.
READ MORE: Cancer: The temperature at which you drink your tea may 'double' your cancer risk - study
This is with regard to why people are going into hospital.
Whilst admissions have risen by 50 percent, 44 percent of this has been down to people arriving not because of Covid, but because they also have Covid.
Covid, in short, is not becoming the main reason people are becoming hospitalised.
This is down to a number of factors.
The first is the vaccine.
The vaccine is the medicinal tool the UK has against COVID-19.
Over the course of 2021 the UK has had a successful vaccine rollout.
Most of the population are now single or double jabbed and millions have taken up the offer of the booster vaccine since the programme was expanded this month.
The second is increased general national immunity.
Not only have a lot of people had the vaccine, but a lot of people have also had COVID, some more than once.
This has resulted in a level of herd immunity.
Combined with the vaccine, as a nation our immune systems are stronger and have learnt to fight off COVID.
This does not mean that COVID isn’t still a threat.
Rising case rates and the rising numbers of people in intensive care, mainly those who unvaccinated, mean that the NHS is still under immense pressure.
Not only, is it trying to treat a high number of COVID patients, it is also trying to carry out non-COVID care too.
As a result, the UK could still find itself with more restrictions as it enters the cold winter months of 2022.