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What we know about the ‘fleeting’ spread of the COVID-19 Delta variant in Sydney

What we know about the ‘fleeting’ spread of the COVID-19 Delta variant in Sydney

It took just seconds for a person to be infected with COVID-19 as a stranger walked past them while shopping at Bondi Junction Westfield.

And it hasn’t happened just once.

Australian health officials are warning it no longer takes up to 15 minutes to pass on the deadly virus.

It can be a “fleeting moment” of just five to 10 seconds.

Here’s what we know about the quickening spread of COVID-19.

New variants are much more infectious

Viruses like coronavirus mutate over time as they spread throughout the population. These are known as variants.

Two of those variants that have spread in the community in the past month have been the Kappa variant and the Delta variant.

The Kappa variant is highly infectious and triggered Victoria’s latest lockdown.

The state’s COVID-19 commander Jeroen Weimar said the Kappa variant had spread in cases of “fleeting contact”.

While COVID previously infected people in the same house or workplace, Kappa has “stranger-to-stranger transmission”.

The Delta variant was also detected in Victoria after the start of lockdown, and is the variant in New South Wales’ outbreak.

Experts say the Delta variant appears to be more transmissible across all age groups, including children.

It is spread so easily that a person in Sydney infected a stranger simply by walking past them

Strangers are passing on the virus

NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant described the Bondi Junction incident as a “scarily fleeting” encounter.

“They are clearly facing each other but it is literally someone moving across from each other for a moment, close, but momentary,” Dr Chant said.

Dr Chant suspects two other people were infected with COVID in the same fashion.

“We haven’t been able to look at the exact same crossover point [in those two cases], but we know they were 20 metres [apart], signing in at different venues at the same time or in that area, so we suspect they did cross over,” she said.

Griffith University virologist Lara Herrero said in the case that was captured on CCTV, the virus would have had lingered in the air long enough for the unfortunate person to take a breath in and be infected.

“You have to be so unlucky, and the poor person is exactly that, just incredibly unlucky,” Dr Herrero said.

“But the data so far is suggesting perhaps if it were the original strain, the Wuhan strain, it would not have transmitted that quickly.

“And the Alpha [strain] would have had less chance, but the Delta is certainly looking like it’s the most transmissible strain so far.”

The risk of COVID-19 has never been higher

The speed and ease with which the Delta variant spreads has prompted states and territories to act quickly to shut travellers from affected areas out.

Queensland’s Chief Health Officer Jeannette Young has warned we are seeing “very fleeting contact” in some cases.

“If you remember at the start of this pandemic, I spoke about 15 minutes of close contact being a concern,” she said.


Source: https://www.abc.net.au/

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