Biden coronavirus advisor: 3 months will be the ‘darkest period’ of the pandemic

A member of President-elect Joe Biden’s alleged coronavirus working group has issued a warning about the worst coronavirus spikes in the coming weeks.

Dr. Michael Osterholm has warned that anyone who supplies the air with others in public or private spaces with others who are not in his immediate circle runs the threat not only of contracting the virus, but of spreading it unknowingly.

“Over the next 12 to 14 weeks, it is most likely to be the darkest era of this total pandemic,” Osterholm told Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo that the upcoming holiday season may be negative for the spread of the virus.

On Monday, Biden and alleged Vice President-elect Kamala Harris announced their 10-member COVID-19 Transition Advisory Committee, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

Osterholm said the United States remains at the forefront of Asian countries that have corrected the virus better than elsewhere and thanked others for firmly complying with government-enforced public fitness rules until cases are reduced.

The adviser said it was difficult to reflect this technique, while many Americans remain skeptical about the severity of the virus, which has largely been politicized.

“I must say that, for the time being, if you could only spend an hour in one of our extensive care teams and in the many hospitals in this country that are lately full of cases, I think that would give other people a sophisticated call for attention. “he said. But for now, we’re still seeing other people acting like this virus doesn’t exist. “

Osterholm added that he had argued from the outset in favor of the first closure and said he believed that economics and public aptitude should not be looked at from a separate angle. He thinks that if virus cases increase, the economy will suffer. the virus will help cure long-term economic damage.

“In a sense, we had to stick to the concept that what we were necessarily doing was, in fact, giving us time to control the virus and get out of there, and we would pay for it, which means we would borrow our savings in this country to pay for it. And that wouldn’t happen anywhere. And it’s a genuine challenge,” Osterholm said.

The United States has now surpassed 10 million COVID-19s and has more than 237,000 coronavirus-related deaths.

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