A NEW variant of Covid-19 called 'Kraken' is set to heap further pressure on hospitals as health experts have issued a warning to the UK.

Reports suggest the Omicron variant XBB.1.5, nicknamed Kraken, is already in the UK and is likely to lead to a new surge in Covid cases in a couple of weeks' time.

It comes as the county's hospitals and NHS services are already struggling to cope, with growing numbers of people needing treatment due to the 'twindemic' of Covid and influenza.

The World Health Organisation’s (WHO) technical lead for Covid Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove expressed her concern about the growth of the new variant.

Speaking at a press conference, she said: "We are concerned about its growth advantage in particular in some countries in Europe and in the US... particularly the Northeast part of the United States, where XBB.1.5 has rapidly replaced other circulating variants.

"Our concern is how transmissible it is… and the more this virus circulates, the more opportunities it will have to change.”

 

Professor Paul Hunter, based at the University of East Anglia, added: "[Kraken] is already here and it had been spreading in the United States before this.

"It may well lead to a surge of infections, probably rising in a couple of weeks from now.

"When infection rates go up, so the number of people in hospital goes up.

"But I am not sure how high this infection rate will go or how much respiratory disease, hospitalisation or deaths there will be, although it will be nowhere near as high as it was this time last year."

Prof Hunter said the new variant would spread just as it looked as if the NHS might get some respite, with the current wave of Covid infections seemingly on the decline.

He said there did not seem to be a great deal of difference between the new variant and its predecessors and stressed people who had been vaccinated or had previously been affected would have some immunity against it.

But Prof Hunter said: "What the hospitals and the NHS have this year, which they did not have last year, are the high number of flu cases."

Mr Hunter said he was not able to say whether the number of flu cases has peaked and urged people to get flu jabs.

He said: "On average, if you catch flu now, you are more likely to die than if you get Covid now."

Against the backdrop of hospitals and the NHS struggling to cope, prime minister Rishi Sunak said on Wednesday that patients were not getting the "care they deserve".

He said national bed capacity was being increased by 7,000 and money had been made available to ease bed-blocking.

But Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer accused Mr Sunak of "commentary without solution" and said: "He's still in denial about how we got here."