Kosovo third place in Europe with number of individuals infected with Coddy-19

Microbiologist Lull Raka says Kosovo is currently third in Europe in terms of the number of cases of those infected with COVID-19 in 100 thousand people. Raka added that although the economic growth of the infected has been marked, collective immunization takes time, and global research has shown it is almost impossible. Radio [...]
Microbiologist Lull Raka says Kosovo is currently third in Europe in terms of the number of cases of those infected with COVID-19 in 100 thousand people.
Raka added that although the economic growth of the infected has been marked, collective immunization takes time, and global research has shown it is almost impossible.
Radio Free Europe: Mr. Raka, how do you assess the current state of the infected in Kosovo?
Lul Raka: The current situation in recent weeks is marking economic growth in the number of cases, and Kosovo unfortunately is in third place currently in Europe with the number of cases of 100,000 people, after Macedonia and Sweden.
Radio Free Europe: In recent days nearly half of the tested people are getting positive. How do you see that fact?
Lul Raka: It's a result of the changing approach to testing because we already test people only symptoms. We don't train asipotmatic people even if they're in the family circle because of the test priorities. So this has contributed to a rising percentage of productivity. But this is also a reflection of the massive growth in the spread of coronary in the community. These are two common factors. It should be noted, however, that the failure of astrtomatic people has affected this percentage.
Radio Free Europe: Is the country heading towards collective communication, and what will be the consequences if they do?
Lul Raka: No, I don't think so, because collective immunization takes time and global research has shown it's almost unattainable. Since in most countries that have become population immunity, only about 4 percent of the population are affected and the rest are still sensitive and experienced.
That's why collective immunity as claimed by some people even though that no state in the world applies it, because it's of enormous cost, costs thousands of lives of people, and it can't be in order of day. This is because people's lives are more important than the ideas of some scientists or ideologists of this theory.
Radio Free Europe: The death toll has also increased. Why?
Lul Raka: As the number of cases increases, so do the number of hospitals and people in need of intensive care, and thus the death toll. This is the normal reflection of mass dissemination in the community.
Radio Free Europe: What exactly affected the rapidly increasing number of infected people?
Lul Raka: There are many factors and each component is responsible. It's not a time of impeachment, it's not the people or the government's fault, we're all very much responsible. The main factors that have influenced are disregard for the population prevention measures, since June 1 is considered to have completed the koronavirus and there have been no safeguard clauses, but no monitoring of the implementation of preventive measures by state institutions in the first place by inspectorate, municipalities, and there have been delays, political games, and which have profoundly impacted management and impacted that too.
So everyone would have to do their job, the population would respect the measures, the Inspectorate to monitor the respect of these measures, because a large part of the population about 30 percent, think the virus is a lie according to recent research. So there must be political co-operation to address the problem, among the political parties we've seen missing, not now, but for two months.
Radio Free Europe: Why aren't more tests being done, is there a lack of them, or is there a lack of human or even infrastructure capacity?
Lul Raka: This is a chain, because the massive increase in the number of cases in an emotional way increases the demand for testing. If we have 100 cases a day, and now we have over 200 more cases of infection, and we start by the fact that a confirmed person with Covid19 has an average of 36 contact people, then it turns out that within the day we'll have 3,000 and 600 requests for testing.
If we add to this the number of cases that do not have symptoms, those who seek to travel outside Kosovo for either rest or return through their countries, although it exceeds the actual seizures. It does provide the need to license the private sector. Then there are students studying in Macedonia and seeking the test. So we have to provide services to people.
So since the public sector is impossible, then private sector should be allowed. Also testing in the private sector of molecular testing would increase the number of people identified as sick, but they're asimptographical, which is a large percentage.
Automatism would affect preventing infection, as cases would be isolated and the spread of the community hindered. Dobby would be multiple.
Radio Free Europe: Are health capacities available to deal with the current situation?
Lul Raka: Health capacity for four months on all fronts facing pandemics is these health workers who spend four months in chronic fatigue. That's chronic fatigue syndrome, cargo every day that's conveyed to particular symptoms. With a loss of concentration, unwilling to work, food disorders, sleep disorders, and that is a problem when it is added to the despair that the Constitutional Court canceled the wage law and that adversely affects the health workers.
Radio Free Europe: Are the government's latest measures fired when dealing with closing gastronomy in the evening, limiting movement in several cities? Or should they take other measures?
Lul Raka: Other measures for prevention will be consistent with the situation that will take place these days. The result of measures that were undertaken early in the week will be seen next week, provided that they are respected on the contrary, will continue to increase the number of infected people, but the return of full quarantine I think is the last version. Not to come up to it, lest the economy be destroyed, the mental health of citizens think that citizens should respect simple measures, such as wearing mask, distance and hygiene.
Radio Free Europe: Do you have any predictions as to how long the pandemic will last?
Lul Raka: Pandemia ends when vaccines or drugs are discovered. The vaccine takes between one and a half years. We have to confront the pandemic.
But if we implement the prevention measures, the capacities will be manageable, because we have seen that in just two weeks without a checkout, without implementing measures, we have seen what state Kosovo's health capacities are in. Imagine if we have this trend in the next six months. It would be unimaginable and unaffordable.












