Coronavirus

Nebraska, Maryland and Pennsylvania All Confirm Omicron Cases as Covid Variant Spreads to Eight U.S. States

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A medical worker administers a nasal swab Covid-19 test to a traveler at the Dignity Health-GoHealth Urgent Care testing site in the international terminal at San Francisco International Airport (SFO) in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Thursday, Dec. 2, 2021.

  • At least eight U.S. states now have at least 20 cases of the highly mutated omicron Covid-19 variant after Nebraska, Maryland and Pennsylvania all confirmed infections Friday. 
  • This comes one day after at least 10 cases were confirmed in Minnesota, Colorado, New York, Hawaii and California.
  • The U.S. is among the list of 38 countries with confirmed cases of the omicron variant, the World Health Organization on Friday. 

At least eight U.S. states now have at least 20 cases of the highly mutated omicron Covid-19 variant after Nebraska, Maryland and Pennsylvania all confirmed infections Friday. 

WATCH ANYTIME FOR FREE

>Stream NBC10 Boston news for free, 24/7, wherever you are.

The news comes one day after 10 cases were confirmed in Minnesota, Colorado, New York, Hawaii and California, which reported the nation's first case of the variant in a patient in San Francisco on Wednesday and tenth case in Los Angeles on Thursday. 

Maryland health officials confirmed cases in three residents from the Baltimore Metropolitan Region. One patient was vaccinated and recently traveled to South Africa, and another was unvaccinated and a close contact of that patient, according to a press release from Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan. 

The third Maryland case is unrelated to the others and involves a vaccinated individual with no recent travel history, the press release said. None of the three individuals are hospitalized. 

The patient in Pennsylvania is a man in his 30s from Northwest Philadelphia, according to the Philadelphia Department of Public Health. The department is still working to get more information on the case, it said in a press release.

Hours earlier, Nebraska officials confirmed six infections after a traveler returned from Nigeria and apparently infected five members of their household.

The first patient returned from Nigeria on Nov. 23 and became symptomatic on Nov. 24, according to a press release from the Public Health Solutions District Health Department.

Only one of the six people were vaccinated and none have required hospitalization, the department said.

New York officials confirmed five cases late Thursday: one in Suffolk County on Long Island, two in Queens, one in Brooklyn and another in New York City. Minnesota public health officials confirmed the second U.S. case of variant earlier that day in a resident who recently returned from attending a convention in New York City.

The U.S. is among the list of 38 countries with confirmed cases of the omicron variant, the World Health Organization on Friday. 

President Joe Biden on Thursday tightened pre-departure testing rules for international flights and extended mask mandates on public transportation as part of a broader strategy to curb the spread of the new variant. 

However, officials in New York and Hawaii, who reported cases of the variant Thursday, said they believe omicron is already spreading in their communities.

"This is not just due to people who are traveling to Southern Africa or to other parts of the world where Omicron has already been identified," New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Dave Chokshi told reporters at a press briefing Thursday. 

Omicron has more than 30 mutations to the spike protein, which the virus uses to attach to human cells. Some of the mutations are associated with higher transmission and a decrease in antibody protection, according to the WHO. 

Health officials in the U.S. and worldwide have worried that the variant may reduce the efficacy of vaccines to some degree.

"The molecular profile of the kinds of mutations that you see [in omicron] would suggest that it might be more transmissible and that it might elude some of the protection of vaccines," White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci told reporters Wednesday. "But we don't know that now."

Copyright CNBC
Exit mobile version