Get a vaccine to protect yourself from an ‘immediate threat’, says Jonathan Van Tam



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SUBWAYMexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador returned to his daily morning press conferences today after an absence of two weeks after contracting Covid-19, but vowed not to wear a mask or demand that Mexicans wear one.

“There is no authoritarianism in Mexico … everything is voluntary, freedom is the most important thing,” said the left-wing populist. “It is the decision of each one.”

López Obrador revealed that he received experimental treatments, which he described only as an “antiviral” drug and an anti-inflammatory drug.

“I came out well, healthy,” López Obrador said, noting that he had also been doing breathing exercises. “We are back on our feet again, with fighting style.”

Many Mexico City residents have been unable to find beds in Mexico City’s crowded hospitals and have been forced to treat sick family members at home. López Obrador was treated in the apartment where he lives in the city’s National Palace.

Despite the vaccine shortage in Mexico, the country has not received new shipments in weeks and has been reduced to its last 55,000 doses, López Obrador reiterated his faith that the country will receive enough vaccines from Pfizer, Russia, China and India to vaccinate all Mexicans. over 60 at the end of March.

That would involve the daunting task of giving some 15 million people at least one dose in just a month and a half.



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