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Fast-spreading UK coronavirus variant could be dominant in US by March, CDC says

DENVER, CO - DECEMBER 30: COVID Check Colorado site tester Kellen Taylor administers a COVID test at Echo Park Stadium on December 30, 2020 in Parker, Colorado. The site is one of the closest testing sites to Ebert County, where the first case of a person positive for a COVID-19 variant that is thought to be more contagious was detected in the United States. (Photo by Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images)

(REUTERS) — A new, highly transmissible variant of the coronavirus first discovered in Britain could become the dominant variant in the United States by March, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Friday.

The variant, known as B.1.1.7, is believed to be twice as contagious as the current version of the virus circulating in the United States. So far, at least 76 people from 10 U.S. states have been infected with the U.K. variant, according to the CDC report.


Its rapid spread will increase the burden on health resources at a time when infections are increasing, further sapping strained healthcare resources and increasing the need for better adherence to mitigation strategies, such as social-distancing and mask-wearing, the CDC said in its weekly report on death and disease.

The highly contagious variant also increases the percentage of the population that needs to be vaccinated to achieve protective herd immunity to control the pandemic, the CDC said.

“The increased transmissibility of the B.1.1.7 variant warrants rigorous implementation of public health strategies to reduce transmission and lessen the potential impact of B.1.1.7, buying critical time to increase vaccination coverage,” U.S. health officials wrote.

The variant, which includes several genetic changes, makes the virus more capable of being passed from person to person. The changes are not believed to cause more severe disease, but the higher rate of transmission will mean more cases, and more deaths, the CDC said.