SARS-CoV-2 is a nightmare when it comes to containing the virus:
https://sciencefiles.org/2020/02/25/wie-man-sich-vor-einer-infektion-mit-sars-cov-2-schutzen-kann/
SARS-CoV-2 is a nightmare when it comes to containing the virus:
The virus is obviously very easy to transmit, highly infectious and very mobile, i.e. it can be transmitted in fragments via tiny air droplets and can infect over considerable distances;
It is durable and can survive on surfaces, door handles and elevator buttons for several days;
It can be transmitted even if the carrier of the virus shows no symptoms; the incubation period is also very long, ranging from 14 to 27 days;
One infected person is enough, as the case of the Shincheonji sect in South Korea shows: one infected person has probably left behind several hundred infected people.
What can you do to protect yourself from an infection? In view of the properties of SARS-CoV-2 as summarised above, at best the probability of infection can be reduced. What do you mean? We've compiled this. A video explaining this compilation in detail, by Dr John Campbell, is linked below. If you are fluent in English, you can get more detailed information there.
SARS-CoV-2 is a nightmare when it comes to containing the virus:
The virus is obviously very easy to transmit, highly infectious and very mobile, i.e. it can be transmitted in fragments via tiny air droplets and can infect over considerable distances;
It is durable and can survive on surfaces, door handles and elevator buttons for several days;
It can be transmitted even if the carrier of the virus shows no symptoms; the incubation period is also very long, ranging from 14 to 27 days;
One infected person is enough, as the case of the Shincheonji sect in South Korea shows: one infected person has probably left behind several hundred infected people.
What can you do to protect yourself from an infection? In view of the properties of SARS-CoV-2 as summarised above, at best the probability of infection can be reduced. What do you mean? We've compiled this. A video explaining this compilation in detail, by Dr John Campbell, is linked below. If you are fluent in English, you can get more detailed information there.
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