The New Zealand Herald

Covid still killing New Zealanders — and it’s here to stay

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More than 1500 people a week are still contractin­g Covid-19 in New Zealand and three or four people a day are dying from it.

The virus is surging in 84 countries; and at the Olympic Games, dozens of athletes came down with it.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) is worried about dangerous new variants. It is a warning we have heard before — and it comes as vaccinatio­n rates wane globally.

New Zealander Dr Richard Webby is an infectious diseases researcher at the internatio­nally recognised St Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. He developed a vaccine for the 1997 Hong Kong avian flu outbreak, and is the director of the WHO’s Collaborat­ing Centre for Influenza studies.

He told RNZ that Covid-19 was now endemic.

“The word [endemic] — [and] you ask 100 different scientists what the word means and you’ll get 99 different answers — but to me, it means this virus is now in a position to stay. It’s going to be with us forever.”

It was still a disease that could kill people, Webby said.

“It’s probably a little bit less impact than the first few waves of the virus — there’s probably more population immunity now, than certainly the early days.

“But you know, I’d say over the last . . . two or three years, it really hasn’t dropped that much at all. It has maintained a level of disease-causing capacity that surprises me a little bit.”

As with any infectious disease, older people and those with underlying health issues were most at risk, he said.

“It’s those folks who are least able to mount a vigorous immune response who are . . . more likely to feel the effects of an infection.

“So whether that’s Covid, whether that’s flu or . . . name your viral disease.

“What we’re seeing with this virus is [what] we’re seeing with all these others and unfortunat­ely, this is the population that always gets the wrong end of the straw.”

In terms of the disease’s peak season, scientists initially thought Covid would be a winter disease, but that had not proved to be the case.

“We do seem to [be] continuing to have these summer outbreaks of Covid.

“Flu has settled back into [being a] winter disease now and RSV — the other part of that trio — again tags along more in the winter months, but doesn’t overlap necessaril­y with flu season,” Webby said —RNZ

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