
Warning as new Covid strain causes spike in disease in holiday hotspots
Warning as new Covid strain causes spike in disease in holiday hotspots
An expert has explained the symptoms as the World Health Organisation redesignates the new variant
A positive Covid test
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned over a surge in Covid cases with a new variant now responsible for more than 10 per cent of all infections. The WHO has designated the new strain NB.1.8.1 as a 'variant under monitoring' amid concern about the sharp rise in cases.
By late April 2025, NB.1.8.1 comprised roughly 10.7% of all submitted sequences – up from just 2.5% four weeks before. It is already the dominant strain in Hong Kong and China. Lara Herrero Associate Professor and Research Leader in Virology and Infectious Disease, at Griffith University said thanks to multiple mutations the new strain 'may infect cells more efficiently than earlier strains'.
The strain has been detected in multiple countries, including Australia, the US and possibly the UK.
Professor Herrero said: "It's possible a person infected with NB.1.8.1 may be more likely to pass the virus on to someone else, compared to earlier variants. The evidence so far suggests NB.1.8.1 may spread more easily and may partially sidestep immunity from prior infections or vaccination. These factors could explain its rise in sequencing data.
"But importantly, the WHO has not yet observed any evidence it causes more severe disease compared to other variants. Reports suggest symptoms of NB.1.8.1 should align closely with other Omicron subvariants.
"Common symptoms include sore throat, fatigue, fever, mild cough, muscle aches and nasal congestion. Gastrointestinal symptoms may also occur in some cases."
A WHO report reads: "SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve, and between January and May 2025, there were shifts in global SARS-CoV-2 variant dynamics. At the beginning of the year, the most prevalent variant tracked by WHO at the global level was XEC, followed by KP.3.1.1. In February, circulation of XEC began to decline while that of LP.8.1 increased, with the latter becoming the most detected variant in mid-March. Since mid-April, the circulation of LP.8.1 has been slightly declining as NB.1.8.1 is increasingly being detected."
The new strain is being found in large numbers in the Eastern Mediterranean, an area including the tourist destination of Egypt. It is also being found in South East Asia - including in Thailand and the Maldives.
Article continues below
The WHO said recent increases have also been observed in Cambodia, China, Hong Kong and Singapore.
The report reads: "WHO recommends that countries remain vigilant, adapt to evolving epidemiological trends, and leverage COVID-19 management strategies to strengthen systems for all respiratory disease threats. Member States should continue offering COVID-19 vaccines in line with WHO recommendations.
"Based on the current risk assessment of this event, WHO advises against imposing travel or trade restrictions."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Belfast Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Belfast Telegraph
Department of Health bypassed own regulator over report into the Royal's cardiac unit
A leaked report made headlines last week after it found an 'intolerable working environment and a pattern of consistently poor behaviour within the unit'. It indicated operations had been cancelled due to 'personal grievances' between staff and that four consultants had been working from home, citing 'safety and wellbeing' concerns. Chair of the health committee, Sinn Féin's Philip McGuigan, has called on the department to publish the report 'in the interest of transparency', adding that he had not yet seen it. Northern Ireland's health watchdog, the Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority (RQIA), has confirmed it was not approached to carry out a review into the issues at the cardiac surgery unit. A spokesperson said: 'RQIA has not been asked to produce any such report recently.' The body had previously inspected the unit in December 2021. It came a year after a Royal College of Surgeons invited service review report which found a 'breakdown of communication and working relationships within the service'. The invited service review was completed in March 2020, just weeks before the Covid-19 pandemic took hold, and made 37 recommendations relating to interpersonal and behavioural issues within the service. RQIA's review found some improvements had been made. 'RQIA were pleased to see early signs of change and improvement whilst cognisant that it takes time to make cultural changes and embed these fully within a service; it is a journey that requires strong and resilient leadership to embed the vision, align behaviours accordingly and instil robust systems of monitoring and accountability,' concluded the regulator. It recommended that the Trust should 'ensure the cardiothoracic management team involves and actively engages with all staff disciplines and groups'. 'Meetings should be structured to promote constructive discussion and collaboration to address the recommendations of the invited service review,' added the review team. It is understood the leaked review was commissioned by the Public Health Agency (PHA) working alongside the department. A Department of Health spokesperson said 'expert input' from other parts of the UK was required to complete the report. 'Cardiac surgery is a highly specialised service and the Royal Victoria Hospital is the only unit in Northern Ireland to deliver this service,' they said. 'For this reason, securing expertise from people experienced in the area means going outside Northern Ireland. 'An earlier external review had been undertaken in the Royal Victoria Hospital by the Royal College of Surgeons. That review confirmed the cardiac service was safe, but highlighted areas for improvement. Whilst Belfast Trust subsequently undertook work to address issues raised, the department and PHA obtained further external expertise to help support the team with a focus on two metrics — patient safety and team working. 'It was agreed to engage an experienced team with specific expertise involving senior clinicians who had completed similar work in the UK, including in other cardiac surgery units.' Mr McGuigan told the BBC Sunday Politics programme that the report had led to 'very many public trust issues'. 'We are told there are recommendations and an action plan contained within the report. 'I think for proper scrutiny and to restore public trust, what we need to see is the report in the first instance published so we can interrogate the recommendations for restoring public trust in this issue,' he said. Health Minister Mike Nesbitt has said he wants to place the report in the library of the Assembly, but is currently receiving legal advice. 'People need to have confidence when they go to a hospital or whatever health setting that they are going to be looked after properly,' added Mr McGuigan. 'One of the things in the report was that the behaviour of the staff was posing a risk to patient safety, so that in itself is very concerning.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Doctors issue urgent health warning as dangerous new Covid virus from China triggers US outbreak
A dangerous new Covid variant from China is surging in California, health officials warn. The California Department of Public Health warned this week the highly contagious NB.1.8.1 strain has been detected in the state, making it the sixth US state to be exposed. The variant has also been detected in international travelers arriving in Washington state, Virginia, Hawaii, Rhode Island and New York City since March. Health officials said the variant was first detected in March and has been on the rise since May 1. Since April, NB.1.8.1 has increased from two percent of Covid cases in California to 19 percent, according to health department data. Lab tests suggest NB.1.8.1, which was first detected in January in China, is more infectious than currently circulating strains, which means it could lead to a spike in infections and hospital admissions. World Health Organization data also suggests it makes up more than half the variants currently circulating. The warning comes as some physicians in California have called for the return of mask mandates to emulate countries like Hong Kong. The California Department of Public Health told The Sacremento Bee: ' COVID-19 continues to circulate in California and future seasonal increases in disease levels are likely.' NB.1.8.1 is not yet prevalent enough in the US to be publicly tracked by the CDC. Strain LP.8.1 is currently the most dominant in the US, making up 73 percent of Covid infections. The latest vaccines target the JN.1 variant, which LP.8.1 is descended from. The California Public Health Department said: 'Currently available vaccines are expected to remain effective.' However, health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr has moved to remove access to the Covid vaccine for healthy children and pregnant women. However, it is currently still on the CDC's children's vaccine schedule. Covid tests in California as of April 19, the latest data available, show 2.1 percent of tests came back positive, a steady rate compared to weeks prior. The rate of hospitalizations from Covid during the week of April 19 in California was 1.3 per 100,000 people, a slight decrease from 1.6 per 100,000 the week before. There is usually a delay of several weeks for the most recent data, and infections can take several weeks to result in hospitalization. Nationally, Covid test positivity has decreased from 2.9 percent May 17 to 2.7 percent the week of May 24. Covid-related emergency department visits have also decreased 6.5 percent during that time frame. In China, data shows the proportion of severely ill respiratory patients with Covid has jumped from 3.3 to 6.3 percent over the last month. The proportion of Chinese ER patients testing positive for Covid had jumped from 7.5 to 16.2 percent. Officials in Taiwan are also reporting a surge in Covid emergency room admissions, with the number rising 78 percent in a week over the seven-days to May 3, according to the latest data available. And hospitalizations have risen to a 12-month high in Hong Kong, thought to be driven by the new variant. Symptoms of NB.1.8.1 are similar to other variants and include fever, chills, cough, shortness of breath, fatigue, muscle aches, headache, loss of taste or smell, sore throat, congestion, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. Covid swabs cannot detect which variant you have.


Spectator
3 hours ago
- Spectator
The moral case for alcohol
Another day, another warning about the perils of alcohol from a body that should know better. The World Health Organisation, which just a few years ago was prescribing solitary confinement as the cure for our ills, has recently announced the preferred level we should be drinking every day: zero, zip, nada – not a drop. Last week a Professor Nutt – nominative determinism in action if ever I saw it – was a little more generous. He suggested we would be safe with 'one glass a year'. He was joined last weekend by a dreary columnist in the Financial Times, who said he took up drinking at 30 but wishes he hadn't; it would be better for his health. What madness is this? As the Italians say: 'la madre degli imbecili è sempre incinta', or the mother of imbeciles is always pregnant.