Study Finds Delta COVID-19 Variant Doubles Risk Of Hospitalization, Vaccine Still Effective
Summary from the AllSides News Team
A Scottish study released Monday found that the Delta COVID-19 variant carries double the risk of hospitalization as the previously dominant strain in Scotland, called the Alpha strain, but that two-dose vaccines are still effective against the Delta strain. Researchers determined that the Delta strain, which originated in India, became the dominant strain in Scotland on May 19; the previous dominant strain was the Alpha strain, which originated in Kent, England. The study's findings suggested Pfizer/BioNTech's vaccine was found to give 79% protection from the Delta variant, while the same vaccine provided 92% protection against the Alpha strain; Oxford-AstraZeneca's vaccine provided 60% protection from the Delta variant, while it gave 73% protection from the Alpha variant. This comes after the number of Delta strain cases in the U.K. grew in one week from 12,431 on June 3 to 42,323 on June 11.
Outlets across the political spectrum reported on the details of the study.
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From the Right
Delta COVID-19 variant doubles risk of hospitalization compared to Alpha strain, Scottish study findsA study out of Scotland has found the Delta COVID-19 variant carries double the risk of hospitalization compared to the Alpha strain, particularly in patients with five or more comorbidities. Scotland had determined that the Delta variant became the dominant strain in the country about a month ago.
Using the country’s COVID-19 surveillance program, researchers on behalf of Public Health Scotland analyzed data to investigate risk of hospital admission and estimate vaccinate effectiveness at preventing hospital admissions among likely Delta variant cases. The study was published Monday in The Lancet.
From the Center
Delta variant doubles risk of COVID hospitalisation - Scottish studyThe Delta coronavirus variant doubles the risk of hospitalisation compared with the previously dominant variant in Britain, but two doses of vaccine still provide strong protection, a Scottish study found on Monday.
The study said early evidence suggested the protection from vaccines against the Delta variant, first identified in India, might be lower than the effectivessness against the Alpha variant, first identified in Kent, southeast England.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to delay the ending of COVID-19 restrictions in England on Monday, following a rapid rise in cases...
From the Left
Delta variant doubles risk of being hospitalised but vaccines remain effective, new analysis revealsAn analysis of almost 20,000 coronavirus infections across Scotland has shown the Delta variant of the virus almost doubles the risk of people being admitted to hospital.
The new study also confirmed two doses of vaccine still offers the best protection against the variant, which was first identified in India, and accounts for more than 90 per cent of all new cases in the UK.
Although the vaccines reduced the risk of people needing to be admitted to hospital, it could take up to 28 days after the first dose to have sufficient immunity.
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