KEY POINTS
  • Dr. Abdi Mahamud, the WHO's incident manager for Covid, said it is still not clear how omicron will affect people who are older, have underlying conditions and are not vaccinated.
  • Mahamud said positive data from South Africa was encouraging, but cautioned against overinterpreting it.
  • "What we haven't seen is the omicron wave fully established in the broader population," said Dr. Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO health emergencies program.
A Covid-19 rapid PCR test site sign at Cape Town International Airport in Cape Town, South Africa, on Friday, Dec. 3, 2021.

The World Health Organization on Wednesday cautioned that omicron has not spread widely among the populations most at risk, making it difficult to determine whether or not the Covid variant is inherently less severe than previous strains of the virus.

Dr. Abdi Mahamud, the WHO's incident manager for Covid, said data from South Africa suggesting omicron causes milder illness is encouraging, but the variant has mostly infected younger people so far who generally develop less severe disease from Covid.