Three years on, the pandemic -- and our response -- have been jolting.
https://www.statnews.com/2022/12/27/covid19-pandemic-what-most-surprised-experts/
The biggest surprise, hands down: How the virus has evolved
In the early days of the pandemic, before the new virus had a name, people who had studied coronaviruses offered reassuring predictions about the stability of the virus, which has implications for how often people might be reinfected and how frequently vaccines would need to be updated.
Coronaviruses dont change very quickly, they arent as mutable as, say, influenza viruses, those experts said. In fact, the spike protein on the virus exterior, the one that attaches to human cells and triggers infection, cannot change too much without losing its ability to infect, they assured the rest of us.
That was the dogma. Then came the variants: Alpha, Beta, Delta, and Omicron, with its mind-boggling array of mutations. Since it emerged in late 2021, Omicron has splintered into a seemingly endless succession of subvariants, which continue to mutate and evade immunity induced by prior infection and immunization.