COVID-19 was preventable, O report found BSH)

Pandemia was preventable, an independent review panel established by the World Health Organization has said. According to report O BSH should have declared a global emergency earlier than it said. Panel argued O Emergency Committee The BSH should have declared the explosion in China an international emergency a week earlier. According to [...]
Pandemia was preventable, an independent review panel established by the World Health Organization has said.
According to report O BSH should have declared a global emergency earlier than it said.
Panel argued O Emergency Committee The BSH should have declared the explosion in China an international emergency a week earlier. According to them, he should have done so at his first meeting on January 22nd last year, instead of waiting until January 30th, the BBC reports, broadcasts Klan Kosova.tv.
The month after WHO's statement was lost according to the findings, as countries failed to take appropriate measures to prevent the spread of the virus.
The situation we find ourselves in today could have been prevented. This is due to a host of failures, gaps and delays in readiness and response”, co-chairman Ellen Johnson Sirleaf told reporters.
Data indicates O The BSH was hampered by its regulations and that travel restrictions should be the last chance. According to the European and US panel, they lost the whole month of February and acted only when their hospitals began to be filled.
When countries should have prepared their healthcare systems for an influx of patients with COVIDD-19, most of the world went down in a row, the winner takes all, for protective equipment and medicines. ” said in report.
The panel calls for better processes and structures to discover the other highly efficient pathogen, as well as better financing for the World Health Organization to make it stronger.
The panel has also called for rich countries to share a billion doses of vaccines by September, via O'S Covax programme BSH providing support to low-income countries.
More than 3.3 million people around the world have now died from coronary until now. While the US and Europe have begun to ease restrictions and resume certain aspects of pre-Indemecim life, the virus is still devastating to Asia.
India is in particular facing a record number of new cases and deaths, with severe oxygen shortages in hospitals throughout the country. Neighbouring countries with India, such as Nepal, are also seeing virus growth.











