Coronavirus variants are here. Can vaccines be maintained?

As vaccine releases increase (or, in some cases, stumble) in countries around the world, the SARS-CoV-2 strain has released some new characteristics of its own, mainly in the form of rapid genetic mutations. Some evidence indicates that variants in recent months have made the virus more infectious or, in one case, possibly more deadly.

Virus variants are inevitable and often benign. The new coronavirus has probably mutated countless times without attracting the attention of epidemiologists. But new strains identified in the UK, South Africa, Brazil and California have stopped some infectious disease experts.

Several studies indicate that the strain known as variant B117, prevalent in the UK, may be up to 70 per cent more transmissible than the original virus. Two analyzes in California suggested that a new strain on the west coast, called B.1.426, made up a quarter of the infections they examined. As news reaches between peaks of infection and inoculation efforts, it may seem like the world has entered a race between the variant and the vaccine.

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