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South Africa Sees Downward Trend in COVID-19 Cases Despite Conducting Increased Testing
Epoch Times ^ | 12/12/2021 | Tammy Hung

Posted on 12/12/2021 9:41:02 PM PST by SeekAndFind

The number of new positive cases of COVID-19 reported in South Africa has continued its downward trend despite increased testing, according to South African National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD) data.

The NICD reported 17,154 new cases on Dec. 11, nearly 2,000 down from the 19,018 new cases reported on Dec. 10. At the same time the NICD recorded 104,831 new tests conducted on Dec. 11, which was over 20,000 more carried out than on Dec. 10.

Professor Francois Balloux, director of the University College London Genetics Institute, noted a “dramatic decrease in test positivity,” which fell from 45 percent on Dec. 10 to 28 percent from Dec. 11.

“The Omicron outbreak in SA [South Africa] with its extraordinary fast rise, and apparently nearly equally fast fall, is one of the most mind-boggling things I’ve ever seen during my career as an infectious disease epidemiologist,” Balloux stated on Twitter.

While the number of daily hospital admissions saw an upward trend from 374 new admissions on Dec. 8 to 507 new admissions on Dec. 10, it dropped to 184 new admissions on Dec. 11.

The current trend appears to vary from that projected by a pre-print study in the UK that sets out to model the effects of the Omicron variant in England.

Assuming the most ideal conditions (low immune escape of Omicron and high booster efficacy), researchers projected an infection leading to a peak of 2,000 daily hospital admissions with 175,000 hospitalizations and 24,700 deaths between Dec. 1, 2021 and April 30, 2022 if England sticks with its current “Plan B” policy, according to the study conducted by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM).

However, Rosanna Barnard who co-led the research, acknowledged that “there is a lot of uncertainty about the characteristics of Omicron, and whether Omicron in England will follow the same course as it has in South Africa,” according to a LSHTM news release.

“In our most optimistic scenario, the impact of Omicron in the early part of 2022 would be reduced with mild control measures such as working from home,” Barnard added.

She then pointed out that in the worst case scenario, “mask-wearing, social distancing, and booster jabs are vital, but may not be enough.”

Regarding these projections produced by models, University of East Anglia medicine professor Paul Hunter told The Independent on Dec. 11 that any model “is only as good as its assumptions.”

Hunter said that the UK study assumed that the severity of disease outcomes for Omicron was identical for Delta in the unvaccinated.

“Although we will not know for certain for a few weeks, indications from South Africa do suggest that Omicron does cause less severe disease than Delta, though this is likely to be due to partial immunity,” Hunter said.

“There is early as yet not peer reviewed data suggesting that although Omicron mutations are enough to escape antibody, T-cell immunity would be less compromised,” Hunter added.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: africa; anthonyfauci; cases; covid19; covidstooges; moronic; obamacare; southafrica; testing; vaccinemandates

1 posted on 12/12/2021 9:41:02 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I wonder if this is how all pandemics actually ended... Not because the virus died out but because an innocuous strain evolved that effectively immunized everybody that hadn’t already gotten/survived the original strains.


2 posted on 12/12/2021 9:51:15 PM PST by Skywise
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To: Skywise

Not all viruses evolve into a less virulent form, and with a fatality rate less than 2% and a significant rate of mild/asymptomatic infections, I’m not sure there would be any evolutionary pressure for COVID to become “milder”. There might be some pressure to evade immunity, and those mutations might also make the virus less severe. With some viruses, it is the host that “evolves”, where those most vulnerable to the virus die off, leaving behind a population less susceptible.

Also, hours after ET published this “trend”, SA updated their numbers, so today shows a huge spike of almost 38K. In reality, it’s back-filling cases from several days and not a 1 day spike. But it looks like the trend is still upward.

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/south-africa/

People really shouldn’t dwell on a few days of reports, and ET should know better.


3 posted on 12/13/2021 12:05:18 AM PST by ETCM
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To: SeekAndFind; ETCM

There may be some reporting lag, that can make things look different over a few days.

We have a pronounced weekend effect on reported numbers in the USA, that looks like a sudden collapse in the disease every weekend. Using a seven day moving average helps smooth out reporting lags.

Also, the Omicron curve might be different in the UK. The Delta curves were.

For Delta, South Africa took it harder for a shorter time, and then the case numbers dropped quite low (kind of like Florida’s Delta curve). In the UK, delta surged tenfold, then dropped in half, and then resumed a slow climb, that has continued for months.

The USA’s national average Delta curve is more like the UK so far, but several States have Delta curves more like South Africa (big, quick and done). Differences in vaccination rates don’t explain the differences among States (Florida is just a bit above average in vaccination rate, for example).

Lockdowns, masking, distancing and such policies may drag out the curves over a longer time. Population density seems speed up the curves (Tokyo and Mumbai were hard and fast).


4 posted on 12/13/2021 2:09:43 AM PST by BeauBo
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To: SeekAndFind

The bellwethers are always Africa and CA. They do have so much in common.


5 posted on 12/13/2021 4:53:42 AM PST by bgill (Which came first, the vax or the virus?)
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To: SeekAndFind

The so-called “pandemic” was over summer 2020. An epidemic is when 5% of all deaths are caused by the epidemic. A pandemic is when same exists in multiple countries. When it was exposed last year the CDC was exaggerating the death numbers (with Covid vs because of Covid), it was over and may not ever have ever been an epidemic in the first place.


6 posted on 12/13/2021 6:09:32 AM PST by Chauncey Gardiner
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To: SeekAndFind

Frantically testing as many as they can to try and keep those case numbers up. Got to perpetuate the scam somehow


7 posted on 12/13/2021 8:39:36 PM PST by HKMk23 (The right of freedom of religion shall not be derogated even if the life of the nation is at stake.)
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