The six Covid symptoms as experts warn of new summer variant

-Credit: (Image: STOKE SENTINEL)
-Credit: (Image: STOKE SENTINEL)


Scientists have raised the alarm over a new Covid variant driving up hospital admissions across the UK. The variant KP.3 emerged in early April and belongs to a new group of Covid-19 variants, known collectively as FLiRT.

As of April 2024, three strings of the FLiRT variant have been responsible for 40 per cent of all Covid cases in the UK. These variants are KP.1.1, KP.3 and KP.2, according to the UK Health Security Agency data.

KP.2 is thought to have driven a wave of infections in May before passing the baton to KP.3, which has almost doubled UK infections to 44 per cent in less than two weeks. Hospital admissions rose by 24 per cent in the week to Sunday, from 2.67 people per 100,000 to 3.31 per 100,000, according to new figures from the UKHSA.

The highest hospital admission rate for confirmed COVID-19 continues to be in those aged over 85 years, increasing to 34.70 per 100,000 following a short interval of decreases. However increases also occurred for those aged between 65 and 74 years, in those aged between 75 and 84 years, and most of the younger age groups.

The diminishing immunity of the general population has been considered a reason for the spread of the variant, and a top scientist warns a summer wave of Covid could be on the horizon.

Professor Lawrence Young, a virologist at Warwick University, said: "This is a wake-up call. The virus hasn't gone away and is certainly not a seasonal infection."

Whilst the recorded infections are lower than the previous spring, winter, and autumn, the UKHSA figures show the proportion of positive test results among people suspected of having Covid rose by 19 per cent in a week, from 8.4 to 10 per cent.

Professor Steve Griffin, of Leeds University, added: "Another wave is building." He labelled the rise in hospitalisations worrying, especially as the uptake for the spring booster for those who are vulnerable was lower than in 2023. He added: "There is a considerable difference between the current vaccines and circulating viruses."

The NHS website says you should stay at home if you show symptoms of Covid. These include having a fever, change of smell, coughing, fatigue, nausea, or committing or shortness of breath.

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