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New COVID-19 strain different from UK's variant is found in California

California discovers NEW COVID variant spreading rapidly in beleaguered hotspot as Dr. Fauci warns the UK ‘super-covid’ should be a ‘clarion call’ for Americans to get vaccinated

  • A new coronavirus variant has been identified in California after first being seen in Denmark in March
  • Known as L452R, it has been linked to large outbreaks in Santa Clara and seen in more than a dozen counties including Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco 
  • Researchers say the new strain has three mutations on the spike protein, which the virus uses to enter and infect cells
  • It is different than the UK variant, which has been spreading across the country, infecting nearly 100 people in 18 states
  • Dr Anthony Fauci says the new variants should be a ‘clarion call’ to force Americans to be vaccinated

Scientists have discovered a new coronavirus variant in California as the state continues to struggle with a rising number of cases and deaths.

The strain has been identified in more than one dozen counties and has been linked to multiple outbreaks in Santa Clara County, including one linked to a Kaiser Permanante emergency room that sickened more than 90 and led to one death.  

It remains unclear whether the new variant is more contagious or just becoming more easily identifiable as laboratories perform genome sequencing. 

Known as L452R, the variant is different from the highly infectious one first identified the UK that has recently been sweeping the nation.

The UK’s strain, B 1.1.7., has been identified in 18 states, according to a DailyMail.com analysis of federal and state data.

As public health officials caution that this will soon become the dominant strain in the U.S., Dr Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, says the warning should be a ‘clarion call’ for Americans to get vaccinated

A new coronavirus variant has been identified in California and has been linked to large outbreaks in Santa Clara. Pictured: Registered nurse Merri Lynn Anderson (right_ tends to her patient in a COVID-19 unit at S. Joseph Hospital in Orange, California, January 7

Known as L452R, it has been linked to large outbreaks in Santa Clara and seen in more than a dozen counties including Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco. Pictured: Nurses wearing PPE in a COVID-19 unit at Martin Luther King Jr Community Hospital is Los Angeles, January 6

As of Monday, the new variant has identified in Lake, Los Angeles, Mono, Monterey, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Santa Clara, Dan Diego, San Francisco and San Luis Obispo counties. 

‘This virus continues to mutate and adapt, and we cannot let down our guard,’ said Dr Sara Cody, director of the County of Santa Clara Public Health Department, in a statement.

Cody did confirm that variant was identified in an outbreak in a Kaiser Permanente emergency room in San Jose that led to more than 90 people and patients infected and death.

An inflatable Christmas costume may have helped spread the virus.

The new California variant has three mutations on the spike protein, Dr Charles Chiu, a virologist at UC San Francisco, told The New York Times. 

It was first detected in Denmark in March in California in May. 

Chiu said, in December 2020, the new variant was present in 3.8 percent of genome samples that were sequenced. By January, it was in 25.2 percent.

He told The Times that although there is no evidence that the virus is more contagious, ‘there are worrisome signs that this variant may be highly transmissible.’ 

The two vaccines currently on the market, from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, both target the spike protein to train the immune system to recognize the virus. 

Chiu said researchers are currently studying whether or not the the virus will affect performance of either vaccine.

The vaccine rollout, overall, has been moving at a sluggish pace. 

So far, just 12.2 million people have been vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

This is far short of the 20 million people the Trump administration had hoped to vaccinate by the end of 2020.

Dr Anthony Fauci says the new variants should be a ‘clarion call’ to force Americans to be vaccinated. Pictured; Fauci on Meet the Press on Sunday 

What’s more, as state stockpiles have been running low, so has the federal one.

On Friday, The Washington Post revealed that when the HHS announced the federal government’s vaccine stockpile would be released, this was in spite of the fact that there was no stock pile at the time.

Meanwhile, Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, also spoke to danger of new mutations in the U.S.  

He told NBC’s Meet the Press that although more research has shown that new variants are not more deadly, the fact that they are more transmissible will result in an increased number of infections.

This will lead to already overwhelmed hospital systems across the U.S. experiencing even more strain.

‘When you have a variant that is really very, very different, in the sense that it’s more contagious, it tells you to do two things,’ Fauci said. 

‘One, double down on the public health measures we’ve been talking about all the time. Be very compulsive, as the president-elect says, at least for the first 100 days and maybe more, everybody wear a mask, keep the distance, avoid congregate settings.’ 

The other important thing, he adds is to get vaccinated.

‘The easiest way to evade this negative effect of these new isolates is to – when the vaccine becomes available, people should get vaccinated,’ Fauci said.

‘If there was ever a clarion call for people to put aside vaccine hesitancy, if we can get the overwhelming majority of the population vaccinated, we’d be in very good shape.’ 

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