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Those who hoped the worst was behind them will have to change their minds. October and November will be the most difficult months on the coronavirus front. “There will be a boom in cases and we will also face a higher death rate.” Hans Kluge, director of the European section of the World Health Organization (WHO), leaves little room for illusions.
First day of school, the emotions of the teachers. “Everything possible has been done.” Angelo Papa Video
In an interview with the French agency AFP, Kluge said that although currently, in the face of a growing number of infections, the number of deaths remains stable, the worst is yet to come. “We are at a time when people do not want to hear this news.” In this sense, between Monday and Tuesday, the WHO will bring together delegates from fifty European states to discuss the strategy to be adopted through a five-year plan. “Although many are confident that the vaccine will end the pandemic, the investigation is still ongoing.”
Coronavirus in Europe: the fall will be “harder” with more deaths, according to WHO https://t.co/dHHLrjQaVc
– RTBF information (@RTBFinfo) September 14, 2020
“It is premature to unbalance – continues Kluge – we do not know if a possible vaccine affects the entire population. The findings are mixed: in some positive, in others less so. Also, when we have the vaccine, the problem of order volume and therefore distribution will take over. And that’s why a piece of advice: “The best solution is to learn to live with the virus, stop its spread and this depends only on us.”
Another warning from the WHO refers to the management of the epidemic: “We must put politics aside and manage the situation according to the study of epidemiological data. It is impossible to please everyone, in some countries doctors have to submit to political decisions, while it is also necessary to deal with the skepticism of the people and this is dangerous. Finally Kluge addresses a thought to the schools: “Some may have to close temporarily because in particularly sensitive areas from the point of view of contagion”
REGISTRATION IN ALMOST Kluge’s words fall into a global reality that today registers 307,930 in 24 hours, it is the highest number of cases tracked since the beginning of the epidemic. The total number of cases reported by the WHO amounted to 28,637,952. Meanwhile, according to the Johns Hopkins University reissue, the world’s total proportion of infections has passed the 29 million threshold. The number of infections in the world is 29,019,639, including 924,463 deaths. Since the start of the pandemic, 19,630,897 people have been cured.
Last update: 12:50
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