Spanish study casts doubt on the herd's immunity to the Coronactrius

A study in Spain cast doubt on the flock's immunity as a way to treat the body's pandemic. The study of more than 60,000 people estimates that only about 5 percent of the Spanish population have developed antibodies, writes medical journals Lancet. The herd's immunity is achieved when enough people are infected with a virus for it [...]
The study of more than 60,000 people estimates that only about 5 percent of the Spanish population have developed antibodies, writes medical journals Lancet.
The herd's immunity is achieved when enough people are infected with a virus to prevent its spread.
Some 70 to 90 percent of a population must be immune to protect the uninfected.
The spread of disease antibodies causing the COVID-19 was below 3% in coastal regions, but higher in areas of Spain with larger explosions, it says.
With all the high impact of COVIDD-19 in Spain, widespread estimates remain low and are insufficient to ensure the immunity of the box”, the study authors said.
“In this situation, physical distance and efforts to identify and isolate new cases and their contacts are necessary for future control of the” epidemic, the report stresses.
The study is thought to be the largest of its kind in Europe.
Spain has recorded more than a quarter of a million cases of coronarys and more than 28,000 victims.












