What would happen if the coronary vaccine is not found?

While entire countries are in quarantine and billions of people are losing their means of living, experts are predicting a move that would put an end to the pandemic of the Coronavirus finding a vaccine. But there is another possibility, the black one that the vaccine will never develop. In such a conclusion, hopes [...]
While entire countries are in quarantine and billions of people are losing their means of living, experts are predicting a move that would put an end to the pandemic of the Coronavirus finding a vaccine.
But there is another possibility, the black one that the vaccine will never develop. In such a conclusion, public expectations disappear as various proposed solutions collapse in the face of the recent hurdle, broadcast CNN.
Instead of being rescued from COVID-19, societies will have to learn to live with it. Cities would slowly open up and some freedoms would return slowly but with a very short strait, following expert recommendations.
Physical testing and monitoring will become a short - term part of our lives, but in many countries unexpected isolation guidelines can be displayed at any time. Treatment will continue to be implemented and the outbreaks of disease will continue to occur every year as the number of global dead continues to rise.
The possibility of such a scenario will rarely be accepted publicly by politicians. They would rather speak with optimism about human judgments to find a vaccine soon. But this opportunity was taken very seriously by many experts, because it happened before.
There are certain viruses that we still don't have vaccines for. We cannot absolutely assume that the vaccine will happen or, if it happens, will pass all the tests of efficiency and security”, said David Nabaro, Global Health Professor at London's Royal College and Special Minister of the World Health Organisation for COVID-19.
“It is absolutely essential that all societies achieve the position that they can be protected against Corleone as a constant threat and that they can continue their social life and economic activity with the virus in our midst,” Nabaro told CNN.
Most experts are convinced that the vaccine against Ovidius-19 will eventually be found, as unlike previous diseases such as HIV and malaria, the Coronavius does not quickly have mutations.
Many believe, and among them is the director of the American National Institute for Allergies and Infectious Diseases, Anthony Fauchi, that this will happen within 12-18 months.
Chris Whity, the British government's chief public health adviser, is bowing for a later date and thinks it is too early to expect a vaccine within a year.
But even if the vaccine had developed, it would be an act that has never been realized within the aforementioned deadlines.
We've never been able to develop the vaccine in 12-18 months. This is not impossible, but it would be a heroic achievement. We need Plan A and B”, said Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College in Houston.
Human trials have already begun in Oxford, England, after a coronary vaccine was produced by a chimpanzee virus. In the United States, another vaccine, developed by Modernna, is being tested.
However, what slows down and often hinders the production of vaccines is not development, but the testing process, says Hotez, who has worked on SARS vaccine.
The most difficult thing to prove is that the vaccine works and is safe”, he says,











