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A new variant of coronavirus has been found which is growing faster in some parts of England, British MPs have been told.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock said at least 60 different local authorities had recorded COVID infections caused by the new variant, the BBC reported on Monday.
He said the World Health Organization had been notified and UK scientists were doing detailed studies.
He said there was "nothing to suggest" it caused worse disease or that vaccines would no longer work.
He told MPs in the House of Commons that over the last week, there had been sharp, exponential rises in coronavirus infections across London, Kent, parts of Essex and Hertfordshire.
"We've currently identified over 1,000 cases with this variant predominantly in the South of England although cases have been identified in nearly 60 different local authority areas.”
England's Chief Medical Officer Prof Chris Whitty said current coronavirus swab tests would detect the new variant that has been found predominantly in Kent and neighbouring areas in recent weeks.
The changes or mutations involve the spike protein of the virus - the part that helps it infect cells, and the target COVID vaccines are designed around.
It is too soon to know exactly what this will do to the behaviour of the virus.
"It is something to keep an eye on.”
"Huge efforts are ongoing at characterising the variant and understanding its emergence. It is important to keep a calm and rational perspective on the strain as this is normal virus evolution and we expect new variants to come and go and emerge over time,” Professor McNally said.
Dr Jeremy Farrar, Director of Wellcome, said it was potentially serious. "The surveillance and research must continue and we must take the necessary steps to stay ahead of the virus."
This is crucial as viruses mutate all the time, it's just what they do. And so far we've been given the "scare" but not the "answer".
Matt Hancock said the new variant of coronavirus "may be associated" with the faster spread in the south-east of England.
New strains can become more common for reasons that have nothing to do with the virus.
One explanation for the emergence of the "Spanish strain" over the summer was tourism.
So at the moment there are scary headlines everywhere, but still no scientific detail to know how significant this is.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)