Canada: First case of highly mutated Omicron COVID variant BA.2.86 detected in British Columbia

Canada: First case of highly mutated Omicron COVID variant BA.2.86 detected in British Columbia

According to health experts, Canada has identified its first case of coronavirus infection from the highly mutated BA.2.86 strain of Omicron in a person in British Columbia who had not visited outside the Pacific province. The individual has not been hospitalized, and the discovery of the BA.2.86 virus has not changed the risk to individuals in British Columbia, according to a joint statement from the province’s top doctor, Bonnie Henry, and Health Minister Adrian Dix. “It was not unexpected for BA.2.86 to show up in Canada and the province,” they said. “COVID-19 continues to spread globally, and the virus continues to adapt.”

BA.2.86 is unlikely to trigger a devastating wave of severe disease and death

When compared to XBB.1.5, the dominant variety through most of 2023, the BA.2.86 lineage, discovered in Denmark this month, carries more than 35 alterations in crucial parts of the virus. The new variation has also been reported in the United States, Switzerland, and Israel. The CDC reported last week that the BA.2.86 variation may be more capable of producing infection in people who have previously had COVID-19 or who have taken preventive vaccinations.

Scientists have stated that, while BA.2.86 should be monitored, it is unlikely to trigger a devastating wave of severe disease and death because of global immune defenses built up by vaccination and earlier infection. In recent weeks, Canadian health officials have seen an increase in COVID-19 infections, albeit viral activity has remained relatively low, according to a weekly update released earlier on Tuesday by Health Canada.

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