Health & Fitness
WHO Warns Of New COVID Variant Taking Hold: What To Know In VA
A new variant of COVID-19 is circulating in other parts of the world and could affect Virginia. Here's what you should know.

VIRGINIA ā A new variant of COVID-19 dominant in China is circulating in other parts of the world, including the United States, and it could affect Virginia residents, some health officials warn.
The World Health Organization said the variant, called NB.1.8.1, is primarily on the rise in the eastern Mediterranean, Southeast Asia, and western Pacific regions. U.S. airport screenings detected it in travelers arriving from those regions to destinations in California, Washington state, Virginia, and New York. A handful of states ā Rhode Island, Ohio, and Arizona ā have reported NB.1.8.1 cases.
However, experts say the variant could take hold because itās been a while since the U.S. saw a COVID wave, lowering protection from having had it, and because less than a quarter of U.S. adults are current on their vaccinations and boosters.
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āIt may unfortunately come back with a little bit of vengeance on us. Letās hope that doesnāt happen, but I am concerned that we may be setting ourselves up for that with this combination of factors,ā Dr. Thomas Russo, chief of infectious diseases at the University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, told ABC News.
According to data from the Virginia Department of Health, 1,262,780 adults received the most recent COVID-19 vaccine. Of those, 20.3 percent were children between the ages of 6 months and 17 years.
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In the last four weeks, nearly 11,300 COVID tests have been administered in Region 3, which includes Virginia and several neighboring states. Of those, 2.4 percent were positive for the virus.
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The new variant is yet another of the hundreds of descendant subvariants of the omicron variant, detected in 2021. None has led to the rise in COVID cases seen during the height of the coronavirus pandemic. Although the currently available vaccine is effective against the new variant, some of its mutations could make it more difficult to treat, according to the WHO.
The variant also appears to be more transmissible than the current dominant strain, LP.8.1, both in the United States and worldwide. It could easily exploit waning immunity, Dr. Todd Ellerin, chief of infectious diseases at South Shore Health, told ABC News.
āRemember, weāve seen summer surges,ā he said. āOne thing that COVID has done is it's been able to surge in the summer, and itās been able to surge in the winter, and thatās very different than respiratory viruses weāve dealt with in the past. But we still don't know if this is going to be the virus that leads to a summer surge, it's just too early to know.ā
There is no evidence to suggest NB.1.8.1 causes more severe illnesses than other circulating variants.
āItās an important one to track, but it doesnāt show any signs so far of being able to drive a large surge in COVID-19 cases ā at least in the U.S.,ā Andrew Pekosz, a virologist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told NBC News.
There hasnāt been enough activity for NB.1.8.1 to show up on the Centers for Disease Controlās COVID dashboard. A spokesperson for the agency told NBC there have been fewer than 20 sequences of the variant reported in the U.S. to date.
āWhether it gets a foothold in this country and it becomes our new dominant variant or not remains to be seen,ā the University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciencesā Russo told NBC.
The variant arrives as the United Statesā official stance on COVID-19 vaccination is changing. On Tuesday, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that COVID-19 shots are no longer recommended for healthy children and pregnant women ā a move immediately questioned by several public health experts.
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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