The World Health Organization announced it will use a new naming system for the coronavirus variants based on the Greek alphabet.
Maria Van Kerkhove, WHOโs COVID-19 technical leader, said Monday in a statement that โno country should be stigmatized for detecting and reporting variants,โ Axios reported. WHO officials said that while labels donโt replace scientific names of the strains, referring to them with letters of the Greek alphabet in public discussions makes it easier for people to say and remember.
Under the new system, the variant B.1.1.7 first detected in the United Kingdom becomes โAlpha,โ B.1.351, first detected in South Africa, becomes โBetaโ, first discovered in Brazil becomes โGammaโand; B.1.617.2, first detected in India, is called โDelta.โ
Axios reported that other variants of interest have been labeled, also. For example, B.1.427/B.1.429, first detected in the U.S., is now โEpsilon,โ P.2, first found in Brazil, becomes โZeta,โ B.1.525, detected in the Philippines, is โTheta,โ B.1.526, first identified in the U.S., is โIotaโ and B.1.617.1, first detected in India, is now referred to as โKappa.โ

