In other parts of the world outside China where the virus is spreading rapidly, sequencing efforts that could identify new variants are falling off, Bogner said. Chinese health officials say that they’ve promptly shared sequencing data with the WHO.
“There’s nothing we have kept to ourselves,” Wu Zunyou, chief epidemiologist at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said Thursday. “All of our sequencing work has been shared with the whole world.”
Nine omicron subvariants are dominating in the country’s outbreak, Wu said. Limited sequencing data shared publicly show that the variants are largely the same as strains found elsewhere in the world, such as BF.7 and BA.5.2, according to the data analytics firm Airfinity, and there’s no evidence yet that a new variant of concern has emerged. But it may only be a matter of time and with limited information being shared, it’s difficult for the rest of the world to prepare, experts say.