Another article from Reuters is not so encouraging.
>>>In a study that compared death rates among people in Britain infected with the new SARS-CoV-2 variant - known as B.1.1.7 - against those infected with other variants of the COVID-19-causing virus, scientists said the new variant’s mortality rate was “significantly higher”. . . .
In the UK study, published in the British Medical Journal on Wednesday, infection with the new variant led to 227 deaths in a sample of 54,906 COVID-19 patients, compared with 141 among the same number of patients infected with other variants.
“Coupled with its ability to spread rapidly, this makes B.1.1.7 a threat that should be taken seriously,” said Robert Challen, a researcher at Exeter University who co-led the research.<<<
A highly infectious variant of COVID-19 that has spread around the world since it was first discovered in Britain late last year is between 30% and 100% more deadly than previous dominant variants, researchers said on Wednesday.
www.reuters.com
I seem to recall reading quite a few blurbs earlier downplaying the variant. I realize there was not a lot of evidence early on, but I'm not sure what the basis was for statements such as the following:
>>>[
Dr Soumya Swaminathan] And scientists have now studied this and have found that these variants do tend to spread faster, they're more transmissible or more infectious. So that's the worrying part.
However, so far, they do not seem to cause more severe illness or a higher death rate or any sort of different clinical manifestations.
They seem to behave pretty much as the previous viruses were behaving and cause a pretty similar kind of disease.<<< (emphasis added)
How concerned should we be about the new variants of SARS CoV 2 which cause COVID-19? Is it unusual for viruses to change and mutate? Do vaccines protect against these variants and what can you do to protect yourself? WHO’s Chief Scientist Dr Soumya Swaminathan explains in Science in 5
www.who.int
Not everyone was downplaying it, of course.
>>>The increased transmissibility of the British variant has been accepted by scientists for some time. But British Prime Minister
Boris Johnson said in a televised news conference that it could also be more deadly.
“We have been informed today that, in addition to spreading more quickly, it also now appears that there is some evidence that the new variant—the variant that was first identified in London and the southeast—may be associated with a higher degree of mortality,” said Mr. Johnson.
The government’s chief scientific adviser, Patrick Vallance, cautioned that the data about the death rates associated with the variant were still highly uncertain.<<<
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the variant—which has caused Covid-19 infections across the U.K. to spike and is spreading rapidly in the U.S.—could result in higher death rates. The conclusions are still highly uncertain.
www.wsj.com