by Xinhua writer Guo Yage
BEIJING, Dec 29 (NNN-XINHUA) – For most Europeans and Americans, the annual Christmas season is a festive period for happy family reunion and joyous holiday travel. But they could not do it this year, as the highly transmissible Omicron variant has triggered another explosion of infections and deaths in their homelands.
While many in the Western society are mournfully changing their holiday plans, after airlines and railways cancelled more services at the last minute, experts worldwide are urging rapid re-imposition and upgrade of control measures, as well as, broader vaccination efforts, to slow down the spread of the virus and keep the COVID-19-related burden manageable.
According to data published by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), the 50th week of 2021, witnessed 2,644,836 more cases and 26,179 new deaths registered in Europe.
The 14-day notification rate of reported cases per 100,000 population in Europe has hit roughly 629.2, the ECDC data showed.
France, one of the worst-hit European countries by Omicron, reported 104,611 new cases, the highest daily record since the pandemic broke out in the country, bringing its cumulative caseload to 9,088,371, said the French Public Health Agency. Local media reported around 20 percent of the new cases in France are related to Omicron.
Official figures released showed that Britain reported another 122,186 cases in the latest 24-hour period, breaking the record of 120,000 daily cases for the first time, since the start of the pandemic. It also reported a further 137 related deaths.
The country had altogether registered some 700,000 cases and 810 deaths in the week ending Friday, up by 48.2 percent and two percent respectively from the previous week.
Also on Friday, Spain reported 72,912 new cases, a record high for the third day running. Italy reported 44,595 infections, the highest daily count it has ever registered.
Also dire is the situation in the United States. Data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services showed, more than 69,000 Americans were hospitalised on Christmas Eve.
According to the U.S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), nearly 300,000 new cases were reported on Dec 21, a new high since Jan 8. About 2,200 new deaths were reported on Dec 22, the highest single-day increase since Oct 8.
The CDC announced that Omicron is the cause of 73 percent of new infections across the United States, and even of 90 percent in some parts of the country.
For many Europeans and Americans, a surge in COVID-19 infections, driven by the highly infectious Omicron variant, has thrown a wrench into their holiday season plans, as they are still painfully processing the fact that they have to cancel flights, hotels and other holiday bookings.
FlightAware, a flight tracker website, noted that, 46 flights from British Airways were cancelled on Monday alone. According to media reports, German airline, Lufthansa, announced that it will cancel 10 percent of its winter flight schedule, amid the pandemic. Railway authorities in the Netherlands and Belgium have both decided to cancel daily trains because of rising staff illness or quarantine.
Besides, FlightAware also noted that a total of 1,033 Monday flights within, into and out of the United States were cancelled and 2,982 faced delays due to crew shortages and disrupted operations. 1,700 flights were cancelled on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
“The cancellations came at the busiest time of year for air travel,” and major U.S. travel hubs were “among the hardest hit,” ABC News reported.
Meanwhile, experts and officials are warning that conditions could be even worse in the future. In its weekly epidemiological update published Monday, the ECDC said, an increasing number of infections have been reported within Europe, including parts of clusters and outbreaks, indicating possible community spread.
The spread of Omicron “is extremely rapid, especially among the 20-29 year-olds,” noted Arnaud Fontanet, an epidemiologist and member of the French Scientific Council. “In Jan, we are expecting hundreds of thousands of new cases a day.”
Given the rising cases in Britain, experts said, there are likely to be hundreds of thousands of infections per day, with many being missed by the system.
As Germany is also bracing for a new wave of the pandemic, Ute Teichert, chairwoman of the Federal Association of Public Health Service Doctors, said, a large proportion of public health departments in Germany already stopped contact tracing for people infected with COVID-19, due to overload.
“Because of the Omicron variant, we are running into a situation in Germany where health departments will eventually not be able to compensate for sick staff,” she said.
Silvio Brusaferro, president of Italy’s National Health Institute, also noted in a statement “the great rapidity of the variant spread, which seems to produce large outbreaks in a short time, is expected to become predominate, as it is already occurring in several other European countries.”
In the United States, health officials warned Omicron threatens to overwhelm hospitals and healthcare workers. Many hospitals are already overburdened, especially with patients who remain unvaccinated and those who have delayed necessary care during the pandemic. The surging infections and deaths have also created COVID-19 testing shortages.
“Every day it goes up and up. The last weekly average was about 150,000, and it likely will go much higher,” Anthony Fauci, U.S. President, Joe Biden’s chief medical advisor, was quoted as saying by ABC News.– NNN-XINHUA