Europe will be hit by the second wave of coronary

Europe will be hit by a second wave of Coronavirus ʹ is just a question of when and how big, according to the EU chief for disease control. Andrea Amon encourages the continent to prepare for another crisis, which she said was inevitable because few people will have [...]
Europe will be hit by a second wave of Coronavirus ʹ is just a question of when and how big, according to the EU chief for disease control.
Andrea Ammon encourages the continent to prepare for another crisis, which she said was inevitable as few people would have developed immunity to COVID-19.
Studies suggest that less than 15 percent of Europe's hit countries have already infected, leaving most vulnerable in the future.
Ammon warns that the virus, scientifically known as SARS-CoV-2, will not be removed soon as it is “well suited to people”, the Kosovo Press broadcast.
Experts have warned against celebrating figures showing the blasts are shrinking across Europe, the battle has not yet been won.
Almost all scientists agree that infection is forced to resurface in a second wave in the absence of a vaccine or the treatment for coronary.
The biggest fear is that the second wave will take place during winter and coincide with the flu season, which can defeat already immersed hospitals.
Ammon, director of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), said a second wave of coronary is no longer a theory.
In an interview for Guardian, she said: The question is when and how big, that's the question in my opinion”.
Looking at the characteristics of the virus, seeing what is now emerging from various countries in terms of population immunity, which is not as interesting, between 2 percent and 14 percent, which still leaves 85 to 90 percent of the sensitive population”, Ammon said.
Europe has become the centre of the coronary crisis, with more than 164,350 deaths and 1.74 million cases.
Amon believes that vacationers returning from ski trips in early March contributed to the spread of the disease across the continent.
She also said that the slow responses of governments across Europe cost lives, as a number of countries quarreled with the establishment of impasses and the prevention of foreign trips.
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Figures show that the declining outbreaks across Europe - Spain, Italy, France, and even the United Kingdom - have all been severely affected by the deadly virus, now showing positive signs of recovery. But most Europeans are still sensitive to the virus, studies suggest.
Amon believes that the battle with the coronary will be long.
I don't know if it's forever, but I don't think it'll be too soon. She seems to have adapted very well to people,” she said.












