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Delta plus variant of COVID-19 prevails in Turkey

Delta plus variant of COVID-19 prevails in Turkey

Turkey is battling both delta and delta plus coronavirus strains, with daily infections reaching unprecedented highs.
According to a member of the Coronavirus Scientific Advisory Board advising the government on pandemic measures, they are seeing more delta plus cases recently.

“Sometimes, they fail to respond to treatment,” professor Alper Şener says, noting that patients with delta plus often end up in intensive care. Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said late Wednesday that although Turkey is “out of turmoil,” people should adhere to rules like mandatory masks and social distancing.

The delta plus variant was first reported in a Public Health England Bulletin on June 11. It is a sub-lineage of the delta variant first detected in India and has acquired the spike protein mutation called K417N, which is also found in the beta variant first identified in South Africa. Some scientists worry that the mutation, coupled with other existing features of the delta variant, could make it more transmissible. It has been detected in several countries, including Britain, Canada, India, Japan, Nepal, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Switzerland, Turkey and the United States. Britain said its first five cases were sequenced on April 26, and they were contacts of individuals who had traveled from or transited through Nepal and Turkey.

Turkey first reported three cases of the delta plus in the entire country in July. Although this number later increased as health authorities said, the exact figure is not available.

Şener says variants are a concern and Turkey needs to wrap up its vaccination program to prevent them. “The vaccination is the best weapon against the pandemic. Having your first dose is not important. You should absolutely have a second dose as well and (booster) doses. A complete immunity is possible with three doses of CoronaVac or two doses of Pfizer-BioNTech,” he told Anadolu Agency (AA) on Thursday, referring to two vaccines available in the country. He hailed a rising interest in the vaccination, “following a rise in the number of variant cases and after mandatory polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests” requested from the unvaccinated.

Speaking after Coronavirus Scientific Advisory Board’s meeting on Wednesday, Koca said the vaccination program was continuing successfully and they have accomplished major gains in the first-dose inoculation.

”(The) majority of new cases and losses of lives are among the unvaccinated. It shows how big a catastrophe we would have faced if we did not have the vaccines. It is impossible to stop infections without achieving mass immunity,” he said. Koca said Turkey was “out of the atmosphere of turmoil and concern” in the pandemic but it depends on the public to “make it permanent” by complying with measures like masks, social distancing and hygiene.

New weekly figures announced by the Health Ministry on Thursday show a relative decline in the number of cases though still, they are above 450 per 100,000 people in provinces with the highest rate of cases. The northern province of Rize has the highest number at 488, for the period between Sept. 4 and Sept. 10, down from 653 in the period between Aug. 28 and Sept. 3.
In the most crowded city of Istanbul, weekly cases per 100,000 stand at 183. The provinces of Kilis, Erzincan and Malatya dominate the list of provinces with the sharpest increase in weekly cases respectively.