Scientists tell whether humans can be touched twice by coronarys

A total of 277 patients in the country are believed to be sick for the second time, such as patients in China and Japan. The numerous reported cases of coronary patients recovering after suffering from the disease are, in fact, the result of unsuccessful testing, South Korean scientists say. Researchers from [...]
The numerous reported cases of coronary patients recovering after suffering from the disease are, in fact, the result of unsuccessful testing, South Korean scientists say.
Researchers from the South Korean Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now claim that it is impossible for Coddy-19 to be reactivated into the human body, SkyNews broadcast.
There were more than 10,000 confirmed cases of choreography in South Korea, and 245 died. The mortality rate is 2.3 percent, lower than the average 3.4 percent, according to the World Health Organization.
A total of 277 patients in the country are thought to be sick for the second time, such as patients in China and Japan.
This raised concerns that the virus could mutate as quickly as humans were incapable of immunity to it. However, genetic tests of the virus showed that he did not change significantly.
Because of these first findings, O The BSH has recommended that governments not introduce the so-called “immune passport” that would allow people with 19 years to return to work. The idea is to be released to people who have had viruses and tested positively for antibodies, thus creating immunity.
The first assumption was that tests didn't produce good results. The South Korean Center for Disease Control and Prevention concluded that existing tests do not distinguish the virus's living traces from the harmless dead specimens left in the body after the patient was healed.
South Korean experts also added that the new coronary is different from other viruses like HIV, which can enter human cells and stay there long before reactivated.
This means that it cannot cause chronic infection,” said O Majong-don, head of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in South Korea.
He added that this means that the patient is unlikely to contract Corleone again. But in the future, it is possible that the Coronavirus, like the flu, will mutate and infect people who had it earlier, broadcast Kosova priss.












