News
COVID-19 cases on the rise in Denmark again
This article is more than 2 years old.
Following months of declining infection rates, several Omikron sub-variants are pushing up the number of new cases
According to new figures from the State Serum Institute (SSI), the number of new COVID-19 cases is once again on the rise.
The SSI stats showed a 16 percent rise in new cases for week 22, the first increase since early February.
The swing is driven by several Omikron sub-variants gaining a foothold in Denmark – particularly the BA.5 and BA.2.12.1 variants which now account for close to 30 percent of new cases.
READ ALSO: Corona’s in a good place: most of us have had it, and the contraction risk is low
Further spikes expected
Meanwhile, the dominant BA.2 variation is losing momentum, and its share of new cases decreased from about 61 percent in week 19 to just over 41 percent in week 22.
A similar trend is materialising across Europe and SSI is closely monitoring developments.
“The infection hike we see is especially linked to the rise of BA.5, which is growing in the rest of Europe,” said SSI’s head of epidemiology, Tyra Grove Krause.
“It means we can see further infection spikes in the near future. However, there are no indications that BA.2.12.1 or BA.5 are more serious than the original Omikron variant (BA.1/BA.2).”