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Covid-19: four questions about the rise in reinfections with the Omicron variant

The waves follow each other, but are not alike. The number of reinfections with Covid-19 has increased sharply lately as the circulation of the virus continues to intensify on the territory, indicated, Friday, July 8, Public health France in his weekly update. According to the latest data available as of June 12, 12% of confirmed cases of Covid-19 were possible cases of reinfection. Between March 2, 2021 and June 12, 2022, possible reinfections accounted for only 4.1% of all confirmed cases.

Public Health France defines a reinfection as a new infection (detected by a positive test) which has occurred at least 60 days after a primary infection, which has occurred since March 2021. “The increase has been continuous since the arrival of the Omicron wave”, indicated Vincent Auvigne, epidemiologist from Public Health France, during a press briefing. Indeed, the vast majority (93.5%) of cases of reinfection that have occurred since March 2021 were indeed “suspected Omicron variant”.

Despite a high number of re-infections with an Omicron sub-variant after a first infection with another Omicron sub-variant (44% of cases), “the probability that a re-infection will actually occur after a first infection with a other variant (Alpha, Delta or other)” “remains significantly higher”, underlines the agency. In addition, “the further the first contamination is in time, the more the probability of reinfection will increase”, specified Vincent Auvigne.

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