
On Thursday, officials from the Vermont Department of Health announced the detection of two COVID-19 virus mutations in the state, reports NBC 5.
The mutations, said to be associated with a variant first identified in the United Kingdom, were detected in Burlington at a wastewater testing program. According to the VT Department of Health, these findings are a “strong indicator” that the variant is present in the state.
A spokesperson stated, “Wastewater sampling is a pooled sample of many different community members, and only looks for the presence of two specific mutations, so this should not be considered definitive finding of the variant.”
Samples of positive COVID-19 test specimens in VT have been being sent to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention laboratories to help detect mutations on a consistent basis. Health Commissioner Mark Levine states, “This is a new stage of the pandemic here in Vermont. It is not, however, surprising. We expected that variants could be circulating in Vermont, and now that looks to be the case.”
While the new variants are still being studied, they are believed to be a more highly transmissible form of COVID-19.









