City
Epaper

Vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics continue to be effective against Indian variant of COVID-19: WHO

By ANI | Updated: May 11, 2021 18:00 IST

The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Tuesday said that the vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics "continue to be effective" against the B.1.617 variant of COVID-19.

Open in App

The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Tuesday said that the vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics "continue to be effective" against the B.1.617 variant of COVID-19.

"Based on what WHO knows so far as per discussions with experts globally, vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics continue to be effective against B.1.617 variant (of COVID-19), which WHO has classified as a variant of concern," WHO Representative to India, Dr Roderico H Ofrin.

The variant first identified in India has been classified as a variant of global concern, with some preliminary studies showing that it spreads more easily, a senior WHO official informed on Monday.

The B.1.617 of the Covid-19 is the fourth variant to be designated as one of global concern that requires more tracking and analysis. The three others strains were first detected in the United Kingdom, South Africa and Brazil.

"B1617 virus variant that was first identified in India has been classified as a variant of interest by WHO," said Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, Technical lead COVID-19 at the WHO. She added that the WHO needs much more information about this B1617 variant and all of the sub-lineages.

In an exclusive interview to ANI, World Health Organisation (WHO) Chief Scientist Soumya Swaminathan on Monday (local time) said studies were underway in India to examine the variant's transmissibility, the severity of the disease it causes and the response of antibodies in people who have been vaccinated.

The WHO scientist called for more genome sequencing in India to get a full picture of what is going on in different parts of the country while saying that it should be hand-in-hand with clinical epidemiological studies.

"Sequencing does not give you the full picture. You do not know whether it is more transmissible, whether it causes more severe disease or what impact it has on your diagnostics," she said.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: World Health Organisation
Open in App

Related Stories

Navi MumbaiNavi Mumbai: NMMC Launches Awareness Drive on World TB Day, Maharashtra Reports 10% of India's Cases

OpinionsMerchants of Death Infiltrate Hospitals

HealthWorld Mental Health Day 2024: Depression and Anxiety Cost 12 Billion Workdays Each Year, Says WHO

NationalBird Flu: WHO Confirms Second Avian Influenza A(H9N2) Case in India, Detected in West Bengal

LifestyleWorld Health Day 2024: Date, Theme, History, Significance and Importance

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndia in talks with Israeli firm for world's first computerised rifle system

InternationalPutin begins meeting with US envoy Steve Witkoff on Ukraine peace plan

InternationalImran Khan Facing “Mental Torture” in Jail, Claims Sister Uzma Khanum

InternationalIAF C-17 carrying 70 medical personnel arrives in Colombo to support Sri Lanka flood relief

International"We are ready right now": Putin says Europe risking war with Russia