Omicron: The pandemic 'has never been as complicated as' right now, doctor explains

The arrival of the omicron variant has led to a sharp rise of coronavirus cases in various parts of the U.S. and around the world.

And with the holidays around the corner, many individuals are unsure about what the right safety measures are to practice, especially if they’ve been fully vaccinated and have gotten their booster shots.

“It’s never been as complicated as it has been at this point,” Dr. Taison Bell, assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Infectious Disease and Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine at the University of Virginia, said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above). “We have a variant that’s already causing problems in delta, a new variant that could potentially cause additional problems on top of that. We have vaccinations, but we have spotty uptake in some areas that are lowly vaccinated. And we have a staffing crisis. There are a lot of variables here that could pull the levers the wrong way.”

Omicron is now the dominant version of the coronavirus in the U.S.

“I think in either scenario we can expect to see a higher case burden,” Bell said. “In some areas, particularly where there’s low vaccination, that’ll translate to higher hospitalizations and higher deaths, unfortunately.”

'We're here again'

Though there is still much to be learned about the new variant, preliminary data has indicated that it’s been able to evade vaccines at a higher rate than previous variants while a three-dose regimen (two doses and a booster) of MRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna remain effective at mitigating transmission and preventing bad outcomes.

Orlando Magic center Robin Lopez (33) wears a mask as he warms up before a game against the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center on Dec 18, 2021, (Photo: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports) · (USA Today Sports / reuters)

“When we’ve talked about the potential for omicron to erode some of that protection, we’re talking mostly about symptomatic disease,” Bell said. “Having some sort of mild and moderate symptoms — most of the cases that we’ve seen that have been omicron and those who’ve been fully vaccinated, they have been mild cases. I think the vaccines were designed to prevent severe disease and so they’re still doing their job.”

Unvaccinated individuals remain at risk, especially given that natural immunity does not seem to be very effective at all against Omicron.

“We’ve seen data already that if you’re unvaccinated, you’re 11 times more likely to be hospitalized, 10 times more likely to die from COVID-19,” Bell said. “We know that vaccination provides really good protection, particularly against severe disease.”

Until there’s more vaccine uptake, Bell suggested better mitigation measures to prevent hospital systems from getting as overwhelmed as they were last winter.