Scientists: Coronavirus is even more dangerous; it spreads from the air

The newspaper “The New York Times” writes that a group of 239 scientists from 32 different countries will publish an open letter to the World Health Organisation (OBSH) in a scientific magazine next week. Scientists Seek O AV to change recommendations for coronavirus in order to avoid new infections. Scientists [...]
The newspaper “The New York Times” writes that a group of 239 scientists from 32 different countries will publish an open letter to the World Health Organisation (OBSH) in a scientific magazine next week.
Scientists Seek O AV to change recommendations for coronavirus in order to avoid new infections.
Scientists say that the coronavirus is spread by the air, so the virus can float in the air in closed environments and when one absorbs the air with viruses it will become infected.
So far O BSH has maintained that the virus spreads through the spray of secretions from the mouth or nose released from the infected person during the sneezing or cough, but these sprays are heavy and fall quickly to the ground. So if another person stays in the distance he's not in danger. And if the infected person wears a mask, the spray doesn't spread into the air.
But if the virus actually spreads from the air, as the paper writes, the important measures will be to prevent spread. The new measures will include putting masks in closed environments, “and if individuals stay away from each other” and that the N95 massacres must be made mandatory for health workers, as these masks “also reflect the smallest sprays of widespread secretions through the respiratory system from the sick (4)x3>.
In addition, air circulation systems may need modifications “to reduce to the maximum circulated air”.
The New York Times writes that after analyzing WHO's internal emails and interviews with 20 scientists, including World Health Organization consultants, the image of an organisation that “with all good intentions does not follow in the same step as science”.
The New York Times writes that increasing the number of infections after the reopening of businesses and offices “up and over” confirms that “that many scientists have been saying for months: the virus is suspended in the air in closed environments by infecting people in these areas”











