Neither Denmark nor Chekhia: Here's the absolute Coronervirus winner in Europe with the help of veterinarians

A scientist who has used his veterinarian laboratory, who mainly uses salmon testing to test people for coronarys, is seen as the hero of the Faroe Islands in time of infection control. Exactly, this autonomous Danish province with a population of 50,000 there is no death from the Coronavirus, while the rest [...]
Exactly, this autonomous Danish province with a population of 50,000 people has no death from the Coronavirus, while the rest of Europe are struggling with the epidemic.
The Archipelago, located in the middle of the North Atlantic, between Scotland, Norway and Cold Iceland, currently has only one patient hospitalised with COVID-19, and stays in Europe without death at all. A total of 184 people were infected there.
On Wednesday, Prime Minister Bharméur á Steig Nielsen announced he would open gardens and nurserys on April 20th, as well as elementary schools. There's going to be learning up and down to a few high school levels while sports events come back, but no spectators.
The success of their approach is attributed to early predictions by veterinarian scientists, such as Debes Christianen, the head of the National Marine and Animal Disease References Laboratory in the capital of Tórschavn.
In January, Christianen warned the government of the Autonomous Region of Denmark that they must prepare for the possible spread of the epidemic from China.
His laboratory, which mainly uses salmon to test viral infections, had been adapted to human testing; it simply had to buy additional material to test the coronary.
The massive test of salmon in the waters was conducted in the Faroe Islands after a virus exploded in this fish in 2001.
According to official data, 10 per cent of the entire Faroe population, about 50,000 people, have been tested for coronary. Moreover, the Faroe Islands tested the largest percentage of its population from any land or autonomous territory in the world.












