COVID-19 likely to be 'here to stay with us' as WHO warns virus will mutate like flu

    [ad_1]

    The World Health Organisation (WHO) says COVID-19 will mutate similar to the flu and is unfortunately likely to stay.

    The global health officials said the virus is “here to stay with us” as we continue to witness new variations globally.

    Dr Mike Ryan, executive director of WHO’s Emergencies Programme, said at a press briefing: “I think this virus is here to stay with us and it will evolve like influenza pandemic viruses, it will evolve to become one of the other viruses that affects us.”

    WHO officials have previously said vaccines do not guarantee the world would eradicate COVID-19 like it has other viruses.

    Several leading health experts, including White House chief medical advisor Dr Anthony Fauci and Stephane Bancel, CEO of Moderna, have warned that the world will have to live with Covid forever, much like influenza.

    “The virus is telling us it’s going to throw out a lot of mutations,” infectious disease specialist Dr Jesse Goodman, ex-chief scientist at the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), said in an interview.

    He added: “Even if we don’t have a critical situation right at the moment there’s a realistic possibility that variants will continue to evolve that have potential to avoid vaccine immunity.”

    READ MORE: There is ‘only’ one Covid symptom more commonly reported in jabbed

    Some scientists have used the term vaccine resistance to describe the reduced efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines against some variants.

    That’s to be expected, Dr Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), told JAMA Editor in Chief Dr Howard Bauchner, MD, back in February.

    Regardless of the platform on which the vaccine is based, Fauci said, “you still have a fixed immunogen and a virus that’s changing. Sooner or later, you’re going to get a mutant that evades that.”

    Current COVID-19 vaccines are based on the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which the virus uses to bind to and infect host cells.

    However, the emerging “variants of concern” – classified as such because they appear to be more transmissible or deadlier than SARS-CoV-2 – contain mutations in the spike protein, spurring vaccine efficacy concerns.

    When viruses replicate the cycle is like a classic childhood game, Penn State biologist Dr David Kennedy explained in an interview.

    “Viruses copying themselves, it’s almost like a game of telephone.

    “They repeat what they thought they heard, so they make mistakes all the time.”



    [ad_2]

    Previous articleLiev Schreiber joins Tom Hanks and visionary director Wes Anderson in southeastern Spain
    Next articlePrince Andrew makes second journey to Balmoral for stint with Queen

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here