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Doctors in China warned that the coronavirus will not be completely eliminated because silent vectors can spread the disease without symptoms, and this means that people can transmit the virus without feeling its symptoms such as fever and cough, making it difficult to track their spread.
Chief physician Jin Zhi, director of the Institute of Pathology Biology of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, said the virus could become a seasonal flu and “coexist” with humans.
Global closure efforts have been seen in recent months in a desperate attempt to stem the spread of the coronavirus, but researchers have warned that it is unlikely to disappear entirely.
The crown can become seasonal
Research indicates, according to a report from the British website “Thesun”, that carriers of the disease without symptoms can transmit the virus without any symptoms, making it impossible to trace.
The researchers said that Chinese health officials still confirm that there are dozens of carriers of the disease without symptoms every day, and Dr. Qi said: “It is very likely a pandemic that lives with humans for a long time, and was it becomes seasonal and sustainable within human bodies. “
However, Wang Guiqiang, head of the Department of Infectious Diseases at the First Beijing University Hospital, said he doubted whether the warmer months would affect HIV infection rates or not.
He said: “The virus is sensitive to heat, but that when it is exposed to 56 degrees Celsius for 30 minutes and the weather will never warm to this degree, so globally, even during the summer, the possibility of significant depressions it is very unlikely”.
“When UK insurance is reduced, we are very likely to see another wave of Covid-19, and it could strike at the same time as seasonal flu,” added Robin Shattuck of Imperial College.
Professor Shattuck, who was working on a vaccine, told The Times: “The real big risk is if we look at the number of Covid-19 cases we are seeing now next winter and we also have seasonal flu.”
However, Professor Shattuck indicated that scientists are still learning about Covid-19, and they don’t know if it will reappear next winter.
“We don’t know if there is any seasonality around this virus, but you can imagine that when we start to return to normal life, perhaps during the summer, these cases will increase again,” he added.