Nebraska on Friday became the sixth U.S. state to report at least one case of COVID-19 caused by the Omicron virus variant, with officials suspecting the variant was brought to a household from Nigeria.
Some of the patients in the United States who contracted the variant were fully vaccinated. Just one of the six cases identified in Nebraska had gotten a vaccine, the Nebraska Public Health Solutions District said in a statement.
Officials believe the variant was brought to the state by an individual who traveled to Nigeria and returned on Nov. 23.
That person began showing symptoms the following day and soon tested positive.
The other five patients are believed to have been exposed through household contact with the first patient.
None of the people who got the variant have required hospitalization so far, Nebraska officials said.
Ten other cases caused by the variant have been reported in America, across California, Colorado, Hawaii, Minnesota, and New York.
The Minnesota case recently traveled to New York City. The adult male was vaccinated.
The sole case in Hawaii so far was described as an Oahu resident who had not received a vaccine but who did have natural immunity, or a level of immunity from recovering from COVID-19.
It’s not clear yet whether the variant can better evade the protection from vaccines. Protection against infection against other variants from the shots drops significantly over time, triggering the widespread push for all adults, even healthy ones, to get boosters.
Sequencing identified an Omicron case in a woman who recently traveled to southern Africa, Colorado health officials said Thursday. She was fully vaccinated.
Cases of Omicron in California have been recorded in a vaccinated adult in San Francisco and a vaccinated adult in Los Angeles who had recently returned from South Africa via London.
Scientists say the Omicron variant is worrying because it appears to transmit more easily than earlier variants but experts are cautioning against overreacting, noting that there’s still little data on the strain and nothing that yet indicates it causes more severe disease.
The Delta variant remains the dominant variant in the United States, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Friday.