Within weeks, a potential half of Switzerland could be afflicted with the Omicron variant. This projection is presented by Richard Neher, a member of the national scientific COVID-19 advisory group, in the SonntagsZeitung (Paid content). This prediction hinges on the virus maintaining its current transmission rate. “A daily caseload of 30,000 in January is plausible. Plus, a substantial portion of infections go undetected,” Neher notes.
Neher also affirms that early data from the UK and South Africa suggests Omicron exhibits a comparatively milder disease course. However, he emphasizes that hospitalizations remain substantial. “The infection rate’s rapid escalation leaves hospitals with little breathing room.”
Despite this, Neher expresses cautious optimism based on international trends. “Direct comparisons to South Africa are problematic. Their Omicron surge lasted a month before subsiding. Similarly, Switzerland might see the worst over by January’s end,” Neher states in the SonntagsZeitung. A shift from a pandemic to an endemic state is anticipated. “The virus won’t vanish; it’ll likely reappear next winter. But it shouldn’t trigger another major crisis,” he concludes.