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(Reuters) -The World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday classified the JN.1 coronavirus strain as a "variant of interest" and said current evidence shows risk to public health was low from the ...
JN.1 is a COVID-19 variant that descended from BA.2.86, explains infectious disease expert Amesh Adalja, M.D., a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. JN.1 is “another ...
The JN.1 variant was a descendant of the omicron subvariant BA.2.86. It was identified in September 2023 and spread throughout the U.S. JN.1 had one or two additional mutations on the spike ...
The JN.1 variant appears more transmissible than other strains but likely doesn't cause more severe Covid. A new coronavirus variant is taking over, but its symptoms don't seem any worse Skip to ...
Some experts say that most new major COVID variants could evolve from JN.1, in the way that all new major COVID variants currently evolve from Omicron. In other words, this could be the start of a ...
JN.1.4—a “child," so to speak, of JN.1—was the No. 3 most commonly reported variant in the U.S. on Thursday, comprising 11.5% of sequences, Rajnarayanan told Fortune, citing data from GISAID ...
After the busy holiday season of 2023, a new COVID-19 strain—called JN.1—has emerged. This variant was a blip on the radar in mid-November, but it quickly grew to become the most common COVID ...
The CDC said currently there is no evidence that JN.1 causes more severe disease and added current vaccines are expected to increase protection against JN.1. COVID-19 hospitalizations increased 20 ...