Coronavirus: the fear virus is more communicable

The anti-“Karens” were left trapped refusing to comply with Victoria’s new COVID-19 rules.

A disturbing new review suggests that COVID-19 may have stopped mutating, meaning it has adapted to humans and is more communicable. Photo: Wakil Kohsar / AFPSource: AFP

A new test has advised that coronavirus may have stopped mutating, meaning it has adapted to humans and is more transmissible.

The study, conducted through a team of Researchers from Hong Kong at the Polytechnic University, compared samples of coronavirus strains taken from other equipment in the region since last June.

“The coronavirus continued to mutate the waves first and momentarily when conducting similar research,” associate professor Gilman Siu Kit-hang told the South China Morning Post.

“The discovery is very different this time, which shows that the virus has adapted to the human body, so it stopped the mutation, or that those cases all viruses in the same position in a short time.”

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A new test has advised that coronavirus may have stopped mutating, meaning it has adapted to humans and is more transmissible. Photo: Aizar Raldes / AFPSource: AFP

This is at a time when the World Health Organization warned that the coronavirus pandemic is likely to be “a big wave.”

WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris warned that people need to remain vigilant despite lockdowns easing.

She said the concept of a “second wave” is wrong because the spread of the virus does not appear to be seasonal, and emphasized that the risks persist throughout the year.

“People are thinking about the seasons,” he said at a news convention on Tuesday.

“What we all want to perceive is that it is a new virus and behaves, even if it is a respiratory virus, even though respiratory viruses in the afterlife tend to those other seasonal waves, it behaves differently.”

“It turns out that there is this persistent confidence that summer is not a problem.

“Summer is a problem. This virus loves all climates, but what it likes most is jumping from one user to another when we have close contact.”

“So don’t give him that chance. The concept of the wave at the moment, we are on the first wave. It’s going to be a big wave.”

She said social estrangement remained the way to prevent transmission of the virus.

“It’s going through to pass up and down a little bit, ” he continued. “Now what you have to do is flatten it and turn it into something that licks your feet.”

“The season does not seem to be the transmission of this virus at this time.”

“What affects the transmission of this virus are mass meetings, they are other people who combine and others who do not distance themselves, do not communicate about the precautions to make sure that they are not in close contact.”

“Then, where other people are in close contact, we see intense transmission.

More than 16.5 million international cases have been reported since the start of the pandemic, according to Figures from Johns Hopkins University.

The United States has more cases and deaths than any other country, with more than 4.3 million cases and only about 150,000 deaths.

Brazil has nearly 2.5 million cases, India has 1.4 million, and Russia has 822,060. South Africa and Gulf countries including Oman and Bahrain have been flagged as fast-rising hot spots.

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