WHO: coronavirus not seasonal and not in waves
By Isabel Saco
Geneva, Jul 28 (efe-epa).- The new coronavirus is not seasonal and does not occur in waves, the World Health Organization said Tuesday.
Covid-19 is not affected by cold temperatures like the seasonal flu nor by heat, as demonstrated by the high temperatures in the United States and Brazil, the two worst-affected countries.
The WHO said that the six-month length of the pandemic so far shows that the season does not affect the transmission of the virus.
Margaret Harris, a spokeswoman for the organization, said that although other respiratory viruses occur in seasonal waves this is not the case with Covid.
“This one is behaving differently. This one is one where we have to be aware, and it is learning about us as we’re learning about it,” she told the press.
She added: “The most intense and the highest numbers are being experienced in the USA.
“They are in the middle of summer. Also, Brazil, they are an equatorial country.”
Harris said that social distancing is one of the most important tools to stopping infections.
“It’s a virus that likes all weather. But what it particularly likes is jumping from one person to another when we come in close contact, so let’s not give it that opportunity,” she added.
The current epicenter of the pandemic is in the Americas and South America is in the middle of winter, fueling fears that the coronavirus and the flu may be circulating at the same time.
“We also have seen large outbreaks and very warm equatorial countries like the Philippines. So, each season does not seem to be affecting the transmission of this virus currently,” Harris said.
She added that the virus has not been occurring in waves, as with other contagions.
“It’s going to be one big wave, it’s going to go up and down a bit. Now the best thing is to flatten it and turn it into just something lapping at your feet,” she continued.
“But at the moment, first, second, third wave, these things don’t really make sense.”
Harris also highlighted the cost of Covid tests in some countries and the fact that some people have to pay unless their condition is serious or they have been admitted to hospital.
She cited as an example the Democratic Republic of the Congo, one of the poorest countries in the world where a test costs $30, and Mexico, where a molecular diagnostic test can cost up to $500.
The WHO has urged governments to make testings as accessible as possible to the population. EFE-EPA
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