Scientists have issued a stark warning that the Covid-19 variant known as Delta is shaping up to cause devastation in the UK as soon as July.

It's predicted that by next month the country could see a surge of 100,000 daily Covid-19 cases due to the super-spreading variant, in a grim reminder to the world of the horrors it can cause.

The rare form is a splinter form of a virus in which the two copies breaking travel independently but require the help of one another, allowing the disease to spread more easily through the body.

Delta is a perfect storm for a perfect storm in that the virus grew further over a less-developed part of the UK population compared to the countries where it bursts in the wild to devastate human health over the past six months.

In Bristol, which has suffered the largest number of cases so far, the spread of Delta is largely down to a change in the way thematic lymphatic filariasis is transmitted.

"For this 18 year-old boy to catch Delta, it was a factors still not well understood but likely related to his partner's sexual activity with someone who had the virus. Even though the disease does not affect the male parts of the body, the virus affects the female genital area and these fluids become infected. It seems airborne and he is still contagious because he was still rectally bleeding when he fell ill," Dr Hayley Morgan, director of the Centre for Hepatitis, HIV and STI at University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust.

Free prescription?

Canadian health authorities have offered medicine to PCRs in the fight against the disease across the Atlantic.

The UK has delivered 12 high intensity plasma re-infusions (HIV PRAI) and one strong antibody infusion as part of its disease management programme.

The country – which signed the first legally binding global memorandum of understanding to fight the disease in January 2014 – has the highest number of cases than all the other countries in the world together – including Brazil – where it was initially reported, alongside Lungu and Swaziland.

It's estimated that up to 48,000 people in Britain may be infected with the virus each year.

The first phase of a five million-pound (between £50,000 and £200,000) multi-centre experiment to evaluate a controversial treatment in a unsuspecting population were revealed in February 2015.

The treatment involves using chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) to treat HIV and influenza virus infections and has so far evoked mixed reactions because of the fact that it was shown to impact the reproduction capacity of recipients.

However, health officials are hopeful that it will help combat an Aids-seeking population in three million Brits currently infected with HIV/AIDS.

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