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MALTATODAY 24 September 2023

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NEWS 16 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 24 SEPTEMBER 2023 When it looks this good, you might want to start with dessert first. Relax and enjoy your three-course meal while we take care of your comfort and safety. With a choice of regional dishes, extra snacks on longer journeys, and a wide range of complimentary drinks, you may need to loosen your seatbelt a lile. Fly to over 130 destinations including Dubai, Australia and Cyprus and enjoy the journey as much as the destination. ECONOMY has never tasted so sweet MATTHEW VELLA THE director of the Europe- an Centre for Disease Preven- tion and Control has called for heightened measures at the end of summer to prevent a resur- gence of COVID-19 infection at the start of autumn. In early September, increasing COVID-19 transmission had been reported by more than half of EU/EEA countries, said ECDC director Andrea Ammon. The increases are likely con- tributed to by factors such as in- creased travel and large gather- ings during the summer months, as well as waning immunity to infection following a long period of low virus circulation. "Europe will soon see the arriv- al of autumn and winter, where we anticipate a resurgence of seasonal influenza and RSV (res- piratory syncytial virus)," Am- mon said. "We are also seeing small increases in SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) transmission in the EU/EEA and anticipate that all three viruses will co-circulate in the coming months. With this, there is the need to highlight the importance of vaccination and other public health measures to protect people's health." Ammon said it was particularly important to keep a close eye on COVID-19 in older age groups. Out of 16 countries reporting data on age-specific case counts, nine have seen case numbers rise in people aged 80 and above, and 12 countries in people 65 years and above. These increases have lasted one to eight weeks up to 10 September 2023. While COVID-19 deaths in absolute terms remain low com- pared to levels reported earlier in the pandemic, however, four out of 12 EU/EEA countries with age-specific death data have re- ported small, recent increases in deaths among people aged 65 years and above. The coronavirus strain SARS- CoV-2 remains capable of ac- quiring mutations that can facil- itate its continued circulation at unpredictable times throughout the year. The ECDC said the latest increases in SARS-CoV-2 transmission coincide with the emergence and dominance of the Omicron variants, which could lead to increased reinfec- tions. "For now, there is no indication that infection with these variants can cause more severe illness or make vac- cines less ef- fective against severe disease when compared to previously circu- lating variants," Ammon said. "However, older people and those with underlying con- ditions are still at higher risk of severe outcomes if they get in- fected." In the last winter season, al- though COVID-19 circulated at much lower rates than in the previous two years, its impact was heightened by the co-cir- culation of in- fluenza and RSV, re- sulting in h e a l t h - c a r e s e r v i c - es be- ing put u n d e r h e a v y pressure. "Despite uncer- tainties as to how the 2023/2024 season will evolve, we need to act now to minimise the expected burden on healthcare systems caused by co-circulation of respiratory viruses," Ammon told European doctors. mvella@mediatoday.com.mt Three years after COVID, autumn flu brings back virus fears

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