A retired virologist says There's always a possibility a new variant of COVID-19 could be on our doorstep.
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Sue Rodger-Withers, who previously worked at Fairfield Infectious Diseases Hospital, said there's increased opportunity for a new variant to emerge, due to the amount coronavirus is currently circulating within the community.
Dr Rodger-Withers, who lives in from Port Macquarie on the NSW Mid-North Coast, explained the way viruses evolve is very different to humans.
"They can't move around unless we do," she said. "They don't have a brain and they don't plan their trips through life.
"Humans determine where viruses travel and how they evolve through their movements."
COVID-19 is classified as a RNA virus, along with others such as the common cold, influenza and SARS.
"RNA viruses don't reproduce themselves very accurately when they are in a human host," she said.
"This is how variants emerge, due to the inability to copy in an accurate manner."
Dr Rodger-Withers said there's no blueprint for evolution of RNA viruses.
"However some variants attain qualities which enable them to survive, assemble and become whole."
Dr Rodger-Withers said there are millions of variants and some never survive, as they aren't able to transmit to a host.
Opening up NSW at the end of 2021, given the Omicron variant was on the state's doorstep, was a mistake, she said.
"We should have opened up more cautiously," she said.
However, she concedes that generally speaking, the Omicron variant is milder than the previous strain Delta.
"We have people in the community who have a level of immunity because they are vaccinated or they've already contracted the virus, such as the Delta variant," she said.
"Those factors can cut down the severity of symptoms.
"You should never underestimate how a person might react to the virus once they are infected."
Dr Rodger-Withers said people should not be blase about purposefully contracting Omicron.
"There is a stage when the virus enters the blood after a couple of days, post the first stage which is respiratory," she said.
"It can attach to certain receptors on the heart, lungs, intestines and kidneys.
"That's what can kill a person."