Selected article for: "acute respiratory and additional variant"

Author: Tegally, H.; Wilkinson, E.; Althaus, C. L.; Giovanetti, M.; San, J. E.; Giandhari, J.; Pillay, S.; Naidoo, Y.; Ramphal, U.; Msomi, N.; Mlisana, K.; Amoako, D. G.; Everatt, J.; Mohale, T.; Nguni, A.; Mahlangu, B.; Ntuli, N.; Khumalo, Z. T.; Makatini, Z.; Wolter, N.; Scheepers, C.; Ismail, A.; Doolabh, D.; Joseph, R.; Strydom, A.; Mendes, A.; Davids, M.; Mayaphi, S. H.; Ramphal, Y.; Maharaj, A.; Karim, W. A.; Tshiabuila, D.; Anyaneji, U. J.; Singh, L.; Engelbrecht, S.; Fonseca, V.; Marais, K.; Korsman, S.; Hardie, D.; Hsiao, N.-y.; Maponga, T.; van Zyl, G.; Iranzadeh, A.; Martin, D.; Alcantara,
Title: Rapid replacement of the Beta variant by the Delta variant in South Africa
  • Cord-id: 5wxdc6c0
  • Document date: 2021_9_27
  • ID: 5wxdc6c0
    Snippet: The Beta variant of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged in South Africa in late 2020 and rapidly became the dominant variant, causing over 95% of infections in the country during and after the second epidemic wave. Here we show rapid replacement of the Beta variant by the Delta variant, a highly transmissible variant of concern (VOC) that emerged in India and subsequently spread around the world. The Delta variant was imported to South Africa primarily from I
    Document: The Beta variant of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged in South Africa in late 2020 and rapidly became the dominant variant, causing over 95% of infections in the country during and after the second epidemic wave. Here we show rapid replacement of the Beta variant by the Delta variant, a highly transmissible variant of concern (VOC) that emerged in India and subsequently spread around the world. The Delta variant was imported to South Africa primarily from India, spread rapidly in large monophyletic clusters to all provinces, and became dominant within three months of introduction. This was associated with a resurgence in community transmission, leading to a third wave which was associated with a high number of deaths. We estimated a growth advantage for the Delta variant in South Africa of 0.089 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.084-0.093) per day which corresponds to a transmission advantage of 46% (95% CI 44-48) compared to the Beta variant. These data provide additional support for the increased transmissibility of the Delta variant relative to other VOC and highlight how dynamic shifts in the distribution of variants contribute to the ongoing public health threat.

    Search related documents:
    Co phrase search for related documents
    • Try single phrases listed below for: 1
    Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date