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Omicron becomes dominant variant in US, accounts for over 73 per cent of new cases

The infection cases caused by the Omicron variant jumped from 12.6 percent of all infection cases in the week ending December 11 to 73.2 percent in the week ending December 18, the CDC estimates published on Monday showed.

Omicron becomes dominant variant in US, accounts for over 73 per cent of new cases
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People wait at a street-side testing booth in New York's Times Square on Monday (Image credit: AFP)

Washington

Omicron has become the dominant Covid-19 variant in the US, accounting for over 73 percent of new weekly cases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) latest estimates.

The infection cases caused by the Omicron variant jumped from 12.6 percent of all infection cases in the week ending December 11 to 73.2 percent in the week ending December 18, the CDC estimates published on Monday showed.

In the week ending December 4, Omicron only accounted for 0.7 percent of all the cases.

The Omicron variant is spreading rapidly nationwideand has been found in at least 48 states to date, since the first case in the country was detected in California on December 1.

The unprecedented infectiousness of the Omicron variant and its possible ability to evade the immune system have stoked concerns across the nation. However, experts said preliminary data suggest the new variant appears to cause less severe symptoms and hospitalizations.

Covid-19 cases, deaths, and hospitalizations have continued to surge in the US, leading to the cancellation of large events including sports games and live concerts. Some colleges have shifted back to online classes and exams for the rest of the semester to make students go back home earlier.

The country is averaging about 130,000 new cases daily, a 10 per cent increase from the previous week, according to the CDC estimates.

The seven-day average of daily deaths is about 1,180, up 8.2 per cent from the prior week, it said.

Currently, the US is witnessing about 7,800 new hospital admissions each day, a 4.4 per cent increase from the previous week, the data showed However, the surge in new infection cases did not deter people from flying for holidays. The US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has screened over two million passengers for a fourth day in a row.

The TSA expected up to 21 million Americans will fly between Thursday and January 3, 2022.

Experts warned the US is moving toward Christmas in dramatically different shape than it was before Thanksgiving.

As of Tuesday morning, the country's overall caseload and death toll stood at 51,097,528 and 807,945, respectively.

The two tallies are the highest in the world, making the US the worst-hit country by the global heath crisis.

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