Scientists: COVID-19 transmitted through air, WHO must change recommendations

Hundreds of scientists claim that there is evidence that the coronary in smaller particles in the air can be contagious and have called on the World Health Organization (OBSH) to change its recommendations. WHO says that the coronary spread mainly from one person to another from the spray of an infected person when sneezing, coughing [...]
O BSH says that the coronary spreads primarily from one person to another from the spray of an infected person when he is sneezing, coughing, or speaking.
In an open letter to O The U.S., which signatories plan to publish in a science journal next week, 239 scientists from 32 countries cited evidence showing that smaller particles may be contagious, writes the newspaper New York Times.
It does not matter whether the coronary is transmitted by larger particles after the sneezing or by smaller particles produced by breathing, but what the coronary is transmitted by air and can infect people when absorbing it, scientists say.
Anyway, O The BSH claims air transmission tests are unconvincing, Kosovo Press broadcasts.
“either over recent months, we have repeatedly stressed that we believe air transmission is possible, but there is no solid evidence, or even clear evidence of that,” said Benedhet Allegranzi, O program director BSH for infection prevention and control.












