Dec 22, 2021 Omicron variant and coronavirus news | CNN

The latest on the coronavirus pandemic and the Omicron variant

TUBINGEN, GERMANY - NOVEMBER 28: Local doctor Lisa Federle takes a nasal swab sample from a drop-in patient seeking a Covid test in Federle's mobile testing station during the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic on November 28, 2020 in Tubingen, Germany. Federle bought 20,000 antigen rapid test kits for EUR 100,000 and is offering the tests free of charge, though she is grateful for donations. "No one should be alone at Christmas," she reportedly said. She has received support from a local musician as well as the German Red Cross. Germany is in the midst of a surge in coronavirus infections whole daily averages have been levelling out over recent weeks but remain high. (Photo by Thomas Niedermueller/Getty Images)
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What we covered

  • The Omicron variant is now the dominant strain in a host of countries including the US, Denmark, Portugal and the UK.
  • US President Biden announced a new initiative to distribute at-home tests and said vaccinated Americans can safely go ahead with holiday plans. However, the World Health Organization’s leader said the pandemic might mean canceling in-person events.
  • Meanwhile, Israel’s panel of coronavirus experts has recommended that all people 60 and older be given a fourth dose of the coronavirus vaccine.

Our live coverage of this story has ended for the day. You can read the latest here.

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Biden says "nothing's been good enough" on Covid-19

President Joe Biden answers speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on December 21.

President Biden acknowledged his administration has struggled to meet demand for Covid-19 tests in an interview with ABC News Wednesday, telling David Muir, “Nothing’s been good enough.” 

Biden acknowledged the administration is “chasing” the highly transmissible Omicron variant, telling ABC, “We are chasing Omicron, but the fact that matter is, we’re chasing whatever comes on the scene that hadn’t been there before– and this wasn’t there this last summer, for example.” 

“But what do you plan for? You plan for what you think is available, that is the most likely threat that exists at the time, and you respond to it,” Biden continued. “And I think that that’s exactly what we’ve done, and so for example, Omicron is spreading rapidly, but the death rates are much, much lower than they were. This is not March of 2020 is a very different time that we’re in now.” 

Biden said he expects the rapid tests his administration have ordered “will start going out in the beginning of January, because they’re being produced now,” and confirmed that he, and members of his family, would test before celebrating Christmas together in person this weekend.

He also confirmed that while vaccine requirements for domestic air travel were considered, “the recommendation I’ve gotten is not necessary.”

One of Kamala Harris' staff members tests positive for Covid-19

A staffer who was in close contact with US Vice President Kamala Harris throughout the day Tuesday received a positive test result for Covid-19 this morning, Symone Sanders, senior advisor and chief spokesperson for the vice president, said in a statement. 

Per the White House, Harris is tested “on a regular basis” and tested negative on an antigen test this morning. “Earlier today, after being notified of the staffer’s positive test, the Vice President received a PCR test and tested negative. She will be tested again on Friday then again on Monday per CDC guidance,” Sanders wrote.

Harris will not quarantine, and will travel to Los Angeles this evening for the holidays.

DC sets another new daily record of Covid-19 cases

Washington, DC, reported 1,524 new Covid-19 cases Tuesday – a new daily record for the city. The number of daily cases has gone up every day over the past week with the city averaging more than a thousand new cases a day since Dec. 19. 

The DC Health Department reported no new deaths for Tuesday. 

The three day period from Friday through Sunday saw 3,763 new Covid-19 cases in the district, according to the health department.

At a news conference Wednesday, Mayor Muriel Bowser announced the city will require proof of vaccination at restaurants, gyms and other gathering places for patrons over 12-years-old beginning Jan. 15. Patrons will be required to show proof of at least one vaccine dose.

Bowser also announced that beginning March 1, Covid-19 vaccines will be mandated for all students in DC who are eligible to receive vaccines.

Nearly 60% of New York state's new Covid-19 cases are in New York City, state data shows

The majority of New York state’s new Covid-19 cases are concentrated in New York City and its surrounding counties, newly-released state data shows. 

Nearly 60% of new Covid-19 cases reported across New York state are in New York City. Of the 28,924 new Covid-19 cases reported across New York state, 17,221 cases are in New York City, the data shows.

Of New York City’s five boroughs, Brooklyn currently has the highest seven-day Covid-19 positivity rate of 8.65%, followed by Queens and Manhattan at 8.33% and 8.30% respectively. 

The counties outside of the city with the next-highest case counts comprise nearby Long Island, just east of New York City. Nassau County has 2,468 new cases and Suffolk County has 2,138 new cases. Westchester County, which borders New York City to the north, has 1,400 new cases.

All 54 of New York state’s remaining counties have new case counts of under 600, with the majority having case counts of under 100.

The state data also shows that 57 more New Yorkers have died due to Covid-19, bringing the state’s overall pandemic death toll to 47,728 people.

White House says 10 million treatment course of Pfizer antiviral pill will be delivered "by late summer"

This image provided by Pfizer in October 2021 shows the company's COVID-19 Paxlovid pills.

White House Covid-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients welcomed news of the FDA’s emergency authorization of Pfizer’s antiviral pill Wednesday, telling reporters the treatment “dramatically reduces the risk of hospitalizations and deaths for those at risk.”

“Knowing that these pills take time to manufacture, Pfizer continues to increase their production plans, and now that the pill is authorized, we’ll have discussions to explore how we can help them improve their manufacturing capacity even further by providing any resources needed,” he continued.  

Per Zients, the White House has purchased 10 million courses of Pfizer’s antiviral treatment, with 265,000 available in January and “with monthly totals of pills ramping up across the year and all 10 million treatment courses delivered by late summer.”

“As quickly as Pfizer gets the pills manufactured and delivered, we will immediately provide them to states and jurisdictions for distribution,” Zients told reporters, with a focus on equitable distribution according to need.

“We are not only urging states to ensure equity in their own distribution plans, but we are also distributing antivirals directly to community health centers across the country — this will help ensure these life-saving antivirals are available to the most vulnerable communities and hard-hit populations across the country,” he added.

Earlier Wednesday: President Biden applauded in a statement the FDA emergency use authorization of Pifzer’s antiviral pill, writing, “With today’s action, we add the first-ever oral treatment to our nation’s medicine cabinet and take a significant step forward in our path out of the pandemic.”

“As soon as emerging science showed the promise of this antiviral, we acted quickly and aggressively to pre-purchase 10 million treatment courses — more than any other country in the world,” Biden writes, pledging over 250,000 treatment courses to be available starting in January, adding “we will be working with states to ensure those are being distributed equitably and fairly and that our hardest-hit communities are reached.”

In closing, Biden pledged “any resource needed” to ensure distribution, including using the Defense Production Act “if warranted.”

Spain will require masks outdoors starting Friday

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro  Sánchez announced he would be holding an “extraordinary cabinet meeting” on Thursday to approve the mandatory use of face masks outdoors starting on Dec. 24.  

The country previously ended outdoor mask requirements in June, but wearing masks remains mandatory in crowded outdoor spaces and public indoor spaces. 

In a news conference earlier Wednesday, Sánchez outlined some situations where wearing a mask outdoors would not be necessary, including when practicing sports. He also stressed the government’s plan to “intensify the process of vaccination” to ensure people’s protection against the virus. 

“What we want to do is to intensify the vaccination campaign. The most important measure to fight back during this stage of the pandemic is to intensify and accelerate the process of vaccination, by emphasizing the third dose,” Sánchez said. 

“Science tells us that it protects against contagion and severity of the disease,” he added.

The prime minister went on to offer further details on how the government expects to accelerate vaccinations, with the aim of vaccinating 80% of the population between 60 and 69 years old with a third dose before the end of the year.

Sánchez reminded everyone that Spain is in a much better position when compared to last year, due to the availability and circulation of the vaccines. 

“These are formidable and extraordinary figures. We are better prepared to face the pandemic,” the prime minister added. 

Sánchez was later asked why the Spanish government opted to reinstate masks outdoors, rather than take other nationwide actions, such as limiting the capacity of clubs and restaurants, to which the Spanish prime minister said regional governments are in control of their jurisdictions, meaning it’s up to them to “make that decision.”

The announcement of Spain’s latest measures comes as the country registered at least 60,041 new daily cases, making it the second consecutive day of record increase in cases in a single day, according to the Spanish Ministry of Health’s latest data.

New York state breaks record for highest daily total of Covid-19 cases again

A person gets tested for COVID-19 at a mobile testing site in Times Square on December 17, in New York.

New York state reported 28,924 new Covid-19 cases on Wednesday, marking a nearly 24% increase from the state’s previous daily case record of 23,391 cases reported on Monday. 

Wednesday’s case report marks the fifth time in less than a week that New York state has broken its own record of highest daily cases. Cases temporarily decreased by over 1,000 on Tuesday, before breaking the record again on Wednesday.

Currently, at least 4,452 people across New York are hospitalized due to Covid-19, but Gov. Kathy Hochul noted that while the hospitalization rate is “creeping up,” the state’s rate is still only two thirds of what it was in December 2020.

“We’re not panicking. We have the resources we need,” Hochul said.

The governor also said Wednesday that 12 new state-run Covid-19 testing sites will open in New York state, including at least one in each borough of New York City.

Additionally, two walk-in testing sites will be set up at the Times Square-42nd Street and Grand Central Terminal subway stations beginning on Monday. Covid-19 testing at five additional to-be-announced subway stations will also begin next week.

“This marks the first time state-funded COVID-19 PCR testing will be conducted at subway stations in New York City,” according to a press release from the MTA.

The state-funded program allows anyone to be tested for Covid-19 without an appointment, including tourists and other visitors to New York City, the MTA said.

Biden says 250,000 treatment courses of Pfizer's Covid-19 antiviral pill will be available in January

President Biden applauded the FDA emergency use authorization of Pfizer’s antiviral pill Wednesday, pledging more than 250,000 treatment courses to be available starting in January.

He said in a statement, “We will be working with states to ensure those are being distributed equitably and fairly and that our hardest-hit communities are reached.”

Biden pledged “any resource needed” to ensure distribution, including using the Defense Production Act “if warranted.”

More on the pill: This is the first antiviral Covid-19 pill authorized for ill people to take at home, before they get sick enough to be hospitalized.

High-risk individuals age 12 and older who weigh at least 88 pounds and have a positive SARS-CoV-2 test are eligible for this treatment and will need to have it prescribed by a doctor.

The pill “should be initiated as soon as possible after diagnosis of Covid-19 and within five days of symptom onset,” according to an FDA statement.

Paxlovid combines a new antiviral drug named nirmatrelvir and an older one called ritonavir and is administered as three pills given twice a day for five days.

CNN’s Jamie Gumbrecht and Amanda Sealy contributed reporting to this post.

Here's a look at the latest Covid-19 vaccination data in the US

A healthcare worker administers a Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to a person at a drive-thru site in Tropical Park on December 16, in Miami.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published its latest data Wednesday on vaccination efforts in the United States. Here’s a snapshot of the figures:

  • Fully vaccinated: 61.7% of the total US population (all ages), about 205 million people
  • Not vaccinated: 22.6% of the eligible population (age 5+) have not received any dose of Covid-19 vaccine, about 71 million people
  • Current pace of vaccinations (7-day average): 1,531,067 doses are being administered each day 
  • That’s down about 15% compared to a month ago. 
  • More than half – about 1 million – are booster doses.
  • An average of about 230,000 people are initiating vaccination each day.
  • An average of about 282,000 people are becoming fully vaccinated each day.
  • About 63.2 million people have received an additional dose, or booster
  • 33.5% of fully vaccinated adults (18+) have received a booster
  • 45.4% of fully vaccinated people age 50 and older have received a booster
  • 55.8% of fully vaccinated seniors (65+) have received a booster 
  • But only about 19% of the total US population is fully vaccinated and boosted

Note: CDC data on Covid-19 vaccinations are estimates. The agency notes that data on people who are fully vaccinated and those with a booster dose may be underestimated, while data on people with at least one dose may be overestimated. 

Omicron increasingly responsibly for Canada's rapid jump in Covid-19 cases, officials say

Covid-19 cases in Canada jumped to 11,300 Tuesday, up from the national average of 5,000 per day last week. The Omicron variant is increasingly responsible for the rapidly rising cases, officials announced.

While the virus’ Delta variant is still present, Omicron has already become the predominant variant in some of the country’s provinces and territories, Canada’s Deputy Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Howard Njoo said.

Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam echoed Njoo’s message, adding that modeling shows by January, “we could have a very high number of cases, which underscores the need to act urgently now to reduce the acceleration.”

To flatten the curve, the Canadian government is distributing millions of rapid tests nationwide, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said. The government delivered about 85 million rapid tests through November and 35 million rapid tests in the first few weeks of December, he added.

To mitigate the financial and economic fallout of possible Omicron-induced lockdowns, officials also decided to supplement the incomes of both employers and employees in the event of a government-imposed lockdown.

The government passed two bills, C-2 and C-3, which provide protections to companies and workers affected by government-imposed lockdowns, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said.

ICU nurse: Officials against mask mandates should spend a day watching trauma unfolding in hospitals

ICU nurse Haleigh Seizys

Front line workers have returned to exhausting work days as Covid-19 cases rise rapidly across the United States. ICU nurse Haleigh Seizys, who works at a hospital in Omaha, Nebraska, says elected leaders and officials who oppose mask mandates should spend a day in the hospital.

“I think that a lot of opinions would be different if they could see that just as much as we do,” she added.

The hospital staff is “very worried about what’s to come after the holidays,” she told CNN.

“I think that masks help that kind of steady plateau outside of our spikes,” she said. “As far as spread goes within those small groups, I think that vaccinations are what would help that most, just protect your small circles who in turn are going to take it to that larger population.”

Her biggest support system is her coworkers, she said.

“I think since we’re all going through the same thing, we can kind of rally around each other and encourage each other, but I think also just continuing to acknowledge my own mental health and needs, that’s the biggest part of it,” she said.

Belgium will cancel indoor events and activities starting Sunday due to Omicron rise

Belgium is canceling indoor events and activities, including indoor Christmas markets and villages, cinema showings and shows due to uncertainty surrounding the Omicron variant, Belgium Prime Minister Alexander De Croo said in a news conference on Wednesday.

The measures will come into force on Sunday, and will also extend to indoor spaces of amusement parks and zoos, the Prime Minister added.

Some activities such as weddings and funerals will still be allowed, while museums and gyms will be kept open, he said.

“One thing is clear: we have to be more careful than ever,” he added. “We see that pressure in our hospitals has decreased slightly but this diminution remains very small.”

DC will require proof of vaccinations for restaurants, gyms and other gathering places starting next month

Washington, DC, Mayor Muriel Bowser announced Wednesday the city will require proof of vaccination for restaurants, gyms and other gathering places for people over 12 years old.

The vaccine requirement for gathering places will go into effect on Jan. 15, when patrons will be required to show proof of at least one dose. On Feb. 15, patrons will be required to show proof of two doses. 

Bowser also announced Covid-19 vaccines will be mandated for all students in DC who are eligible to receive vaccines, after the DC Council voted on legislation Tuesday.

On March 1, eligible students in all DC schools — including public, charter, independent, and private — will be required to be vaccinated.

DC officials stressed at a news conference that the requirement for proof of vaccines will be directed at places where people are likely to congregate. Officials said grocery stores, retail stores and museums would not be required to check for proof of vaccines.

Religious institutions would be exempt, but a DC official said “it depends” when asked whether office space would be exempt.

Officials said there will be further guidance issued next week, but Bowser outlined four categories of businesses that would need to verify proof of vaccinations:

  • Restaurants, bars, and nightclubs
  • Indoor cultural and entertainment facilities
  • Indoor exercise and recreational establishments
  • Indoor event and meeting establishments

Patrons can prove their vaccination status’ using the original or photocopy of the CDC-issued vaccination card, an immunization record print-out from a health care provider, and using various vaccination apps including VaxYes and CLEAR. 

Omicron has now been detected in every US state

Cars line up at a Covid-19 testing site at Tropical Park in Miami on December 21.

The Covid-19 Omicron variant has been identified in every US state, as well as in Washington, DC, and Puerto Rico, according to public statements from hospital systems and state officials in their respective states.

It’s been 22 days since the US detected its first case of Omicron.   

South Dakota was the 50th state it was detected in. 

Top scientific researcher says South Africa has passed the peak of its Omicron outbreak

South Africa has passed the peak of its Omicron outbreak, according to one of the country’s top scientific researchers.

Ridhwaan Suliman, senior researcher at the South African Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, told CNN on Wednesday that the country has “surpassed the peak of the Omicron wave now, driven by the significant decline in the populous province and epicenter, Gauteng.”

This was echoed by one of the country’s top scientists, Dr. Michelle Groome of the National Institute for Communicable Diseases, who told a media briefing earlier on Wednesday that all indications show “that we’ve surpassed the peak of infections in Gauteng.” 

Most other provinces in the country have also passed their peaks, Suliman added

Suliman characterized the country’s fourth wave as a “steeper wave,” that was “significantly shorter” than those prior, saying in a tweet it took “about half the number of days to reach the peak compared with previous waves in South Africa.

There was a 20.8% decrease in the number of new Covid-19 cases detected in South Africa as of Saturday, according to the NICD’s epidemiology brief published Wednesday. 

According to Suliman, although test positivity remains “still high at 29.8%,” the fact the figure is decreasing confirms “the decline in infections is real and not a testing artifact.”

On hospitalizations and deaths: South African vaccinologist Shabir Mahdi also told CNN on Wednesday that although there may be a “slight increase in deaths” the figure will be “substantially lower” than that experienced with the Delta variant. 

Suliman also said that hospitalizations and deaths from this wave have proven to be “significantly lower relative to that experienced in previous waves.”

World Health Organization discussing whether to reclassify Alpha, Beta and Gamma variants

The World Health Organization is discussing whether to reclassify the Alpha, Beta and Gamma variants out of “variant of concern” status as the Delta and Omicron variants now make up more than 97% of variants sequenced, WHO Technical Lead for Covid-19 Maria van Kerkhove said Wednesday.

“Since Oct. 20, less than 0.1% of the sequences uploaded to platforms like GISAID have been Alpha, Beta and Gamma. Ninety-six percent of the sequences available are still Delta, and about 1.6% of sequences that have been shared in recent weeks is Omicron. We definitely see increasing growth rates of Omicron where it’s being detected, and it’s now been recorded in more than 106 countries to date,” Van Kerkhove said in a media briefing. 

“The discussion that we’ve been having is how we reclassify them, and once you have a variant of concern, how do you reclassify it as something else when in fact the properties of that variant are really what allowed us to classify it as a variant of concern?”

Currently, the WHO has identified five variants of concern and two variants of interest. Van Kerkhove said the Omicron variant is unlikely to be the last variant of concern of the pandemic.

Van Kerkhove said the virus is likely to eventually become endemic, but the world is not there yet.

“It is a respiratory pathogen, as you know, so we expect to see some kind of seasonal variation, you know, just due to behavioral factors, but we haven’t seen that yet. This virus thrives wherever we allow it. And we don’t get that reprieve in those summer months or certain times of the year,” she said.

“We expect to see flareups. It will depend on how big those outbreaks are as we go forward, but they will occur in under-protected populations, people who don’t have vaccine and people who are, don’t yet have their full dose of vaccine. So I think there is some understanding of where this virus is going. But we remain humble to it because I think it still has quite a few tricks up its sleeve,” she added.

Uneven distribution means booster programs could "prolong" pandemic, WHO director-general says

A booster dose of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine is drawn up in a vaccination clinic set up at St Columba's Church in Sheffield, England, on December 15.

Unbalanced Covid-19 vaccine distribution around the world means that booster programs in high-income countries could prolong the pandemic by leaving poorer countries unvaccinated, World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday.

“While some countries are now rolling out blanket booster programs, only half of WHO’s member states have been able to reach the target of vaccinating 40% of their populations by the end of the year, because of distortions in global supply. Enough vaccines were administered globally this year that the 40% target would have been reached in every country by September if those vaccines had been distributed equitably,” he continued.

Tedros has previously called for a moratorium on booster doses worldwide, and Wednesday referenced a new statement from WHO examining the use of booster doses worldwide.

“Today, the WHO strategic advisory group of experts on immunization, or SAGE, is issuing an interim statement on booster doses. SAGE concluded that the focus of immunization must remain on decreasing deaths and severe disease and expressed concern that blanket booster programs will exacerbate vaccine inequity,” Tedros said.

In this statement, the organization cited a preprint study from Mid-November, showing that when studied together, the Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca vaccines saw vaccine effectiveness against severe Covid-19 decrease by about 8% over six months.

In people over age 50, the study showed a decrease in effectiveness of 10% against severe disease after six months. WHO called this a “minimal to modest” reduction in efficacy, but said the Omicron variant could change the situation.

“It’s important to remember that the vast majority of hospitalizations and deaths are in unvaccinated people, not unboosted people. And we must be very clear that the vaccines we have, remain effective against both the Delta and Omicron variants,” Tedros said.

The statement said in the interest of equity, the focus inside countries should be on “improving coverage of the primary vaccination series in high risk populations as the top priority use of vaccine doses.”

The WHO and SAGE statement also noted that 126 member countries have recommended some form of booster or additional vaccination, mostly high- and middle-income countries. “In several of these countries which are administering booster doses the coverage rates for complete primary vaccination are below 30%,” the statement said.

Spain set to require face masks outdoors again following Omicron rise

People walk in downtown Madrid on December 21.

Spain is set to reimpose a nationwide requirement to wear face masks outdoors, according to a statement from the prime minister’s office on Wednesday. The office of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said he will convene a cabinet meeting on Thursday to approve the measure.

The country previously ended outdoor mask requirements in June, but wearing masks remains mandatory in crowded outdoor spaces and public indoor spaces.

The announcement comes as the prime minister meets on Wednesday afternoon with the presidents of Spain’s 17 regional governments to discuss pandemic measures and the rise of the Omicron variant.

Spain registered its highest daily number of new Covid-19 cases since the start of the pandemic, with 49,823 cases recorded in the past day, the country’s health ministry said late Tuesday, in the latest available figures. The Ministry said, in a separate report, “at the present time, the data drawn from sequencing of specific PCR indicates that there’s a rapid substitution of the Delta variant by the Omicron.”  

Germany to require negative PCR tests for travelers arriving from UK, southern African countries

Germany will soon require negative PCR tests from travelers arriving from “areas of variants ofconcern,” which includes the United Kingdom, South Africa and other southern African nations, according to the German government website.

The government did not specify when the requirement will come into force.

Negative PCR tests taken within the last 48 hours will soon be required to enter Germany from all areas of concern, according to the government. The requirement will apply to all passengers ages 6 and up, as well as for passengers transiting through Germany. 

The government’s list of “areas of variants of concern” changes continuously, but as of this week includes Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, the United Kingdom and all British Overseas Territories, and Zimbabwe. 

New York City has been conducting around 170,000 Covid-19 tests per day, health official says

People wait in line at Times Square to get tested for Covid-19 on December 20, in New York City.

New York City has been conducting around 170,000 Covid-19 tests per day recently, according to Dr. Ted Long, Executive Director of the NYC Covid-19 Test & Trace Corps.

The city’s Test & Trace Corps is responsible for the New York City’s Covid-19 testing operations, as well as contact tracing for all of the city’s residents.

The new record of 170,000 daily tests includes both PCR and antigen tests. New York City’s previous record of daily Covid-19 tests was around 120,000 per day, Long said.

Long added that with the addition of the seven city-run testing sites announced by Mayor Bill de Blasio Wednesday morning, the newest 30 city-run testing sites are anticipated to have an additional testing capacity of 24,600 tests per day, Long said. He added that he expected testing capacity to reach 180,000 daily tests in the coming days.

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