: Associate Professor Kunchev: measures to travel abroad worthless in two weeks :: Monitor.bg



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Associate Professor Kunchev: In two weeks, measures to travel abroad are meaningless

There are already discussions about opening the parks, Vitosha, so people can walk. In a week or two, travel arrangements abroad will be meaningless. They were effective when we protected ourselves from the initially infected countries. The infection is already across Europe. Professor Angel Kunchev, chief health inspector and member of the national operations headquarters, said in a BNT Panorama and recalled that only Slovakia and Latvia are ahead of us in the low COVID-19 death rate.

We are escalating a severe crisis. 90 people a day are not a joy. We cannot draw any conclusions from the figures in a day or two, associate professor Kunchev said.

According to him, at the Pleven sewing company, where people in almost the entire workshop were infected, management had taken action in light of the pandemic, but people were traveling by common transportation, eating together. The measures taken now are even better, reducing the risk of infection. “We cannot close all businesses,” said the chief health inspector.

According to him, not everyone who responds to the clinical picture should undergo a PCR test in hospitals. If she didn’t look like COVID-19, then her colleagues ignored her.

We have been saying this for a long time, and in Europe they say that rapid tests are not the most reliable. A European country even returned a large amount to China for this reason. But the circle of examinees should expand, said associate professor Angel Kunchev. Where we start closing homes, we will close them, but be careful because new ones will open. We try to keep the infection under control, crush the top so there is enough equipment and treatment available. It will be a shame if we lose the situation now, he added.

This virus is not the worst that can happen to us. In my opinion, humanity will be struggling from now on with increasingly terrible cases. The pandemic may now be a good exercise for us, said Associate Chief Inspector of Health Prof. Angel Kunchev.



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