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The World Health Organization warned on Monday that despite the severity of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has caused more than 1.7 million deaths and tens of millions of injuries in one year, it is imperative to prepare for the “worst.” “.
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“This is a wake-up call,” said the director of the World Health Organization’s emergency program, Michael Ryan, at the last press conference this year.
“This pandemic is serious … and it has spread rapidly in various parts of the world and has reached all corners of the planet, but it is not necessarily the worst,” warned Ryan, who faced the most dangerous diseases in his professional field.
He acknowledged that the virus “spreads very easily and kills humans,” but stressed that “the death rate is relatively low compared to other new diseases.” He stressed the need to “prepare in the future for what could be worse.”
His colleague Bruce Aylward, WHO advisor, agreed with this opinion, who considered that despite the achievements made in the fight against Covid-19, including the production of effective vaccines in record time, the world is still far from ready. to combat future pandemics.
“We are in the second and third waves of this virus and we are not ready and cannot handle it yet,” Aylward said at the press conference.
He stressed that “although we are more prepared, we are not fully prepared for the current pandemic, and we are less prepared for the next one.”
The Director General of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, preferred to see the bright side.
Tedros said: “At the level of perception, I think we are ready,” noting that the time has come to “take things very seriously”, adding that things require “greater ambition.”