Doctor: We're preparing for 'a potential perfect storm' with Omicron and winter

The news of a new COVID variant Omicron comes at a time where the U.S. is heading into the winter, adding a dose of uncertainty at a time when cases, hospitalizations, and deaths are rising as people increasingly gather indoors.

“The winter months already were a time that we were expecting to have some surge, just by the nature of people going indoors, the cold dry air, which makes it more easily transmissible with viruses,” Dr. Elizabeth Clayborne, an emergency physician at UM Capital Region Medical center, said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above). “Really, what we’re preparing for is a potential perfect storm with the Omicron variant now potentially landing on our shores and making COVID-19 more likely to surge because it’s potentially more easily transmitted to others.”

President Biden's 'absolutely needed' 5 steps

President Biden laid out a five-step plan for how his administration is planning to tackle coronavirus this winter during a press conference on Thursday.

This includes expanding the nationwide booster campaign, launching new family vaccination clinics, offering free at-home COVID tests, increasing the nation’s surge response teams, and accelerating efforts to vaccinate the rest of the world.

President Biden speaks about the administrations response to Covid-19 at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland on December 2, 2021. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) · (MANDEL NGAN via Getty Images)

“The steps that Biden has outlined are absolutely needed,” Clayborne said. “And I actually think we probably do need to do a little bit more. Specifically, I think we got caught off guard with not doing great surveillance. It was our colleagues in South Africa that picked up this variant. It probably has been circulating the globe for some time.”

As a physician working inside an emergency room, Clayborne said she’s already been seeing many patients coming into the ER for other issues and ending up testing positive for COVID.

“That’s a little bit alarming to me,” she said. “That, on top of the fact that we just had immense travel that took place over Thanksgiving, is really building up to an anticipated huge surge in COVID in the winter months.”

According to data from the TSA, last Sunday, the end of Thanksgiving weekend, saw the highest traveler throughput of the year.

“I know everyone wants to go into the Christmas and holiday season looking forward to seeing their families and loved ones,” Clayborne said. “That’s not going to be possible if we don’t get this under control. And I think people need to be mentally prepared that some of their plans might be interrupted and there might be stricter regulations, such as the testing after international travel that Biden’s administration has pointed to. That’s what we need to do.”