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Over a year and $85bn later, US spies still don t know where, when or how Covid-19 hit the world - but it could ve been a lab -- Society s Child -- Sott net

© Reuters Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines speaks during a House Intelligence Committee hearing on worldwide threatsThe question of how SARS-CoV-2 came to wreak havoc on the planet is one many have asked but none, so far, have answered. The truth is out there, but the very people on the case could have every reason to ensure it doesn t emerge. On April 14, Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines revealed that after over a year of determined sleuthing, US spying agencies had no concrete answers on basic questions regarding the origins of the 2019 coronavirus. It is absolutely accurate the intelligence community does not know exactly where, when, or how Covid-19 virus was transmitted initially, Haines told members of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Components have coalesced around two alternative theories, these scenarios are it emerged naturally from human contact with infected animals, or it was a laboratory accident.

School-leavers should consider careers in scarce-skilled health sector

School-leavers should consider careers in scarce-skilled health sector By IOL Reporter Share “South Africa could be facing a health-care worker crisis if the current and projected shortage of skilled health professionals is not addressed.” This is a stark warning issued by the Health and Welfare Sector Education and Training Authority (HWSETA), following the recent release of data around critical skills. While the World Health Organization projects a worldwide workforce shortfall of about 18 million healthcare workers by 2030, recent local data showed that South Africa also has cause for concern. According to Xpatweb’s Critical Skills Survey 2020/21 the “Health Professions and Related Clinical Sciences“ are among the country’s current top 10 most in-demand skills.

Calls for coherent EU policy on AstraZeneca as confusion and public trust falters

Calls for ‘coherent’ EU policy on AstraZeneca as confusion and public trust falters Issued on: 12/04/2021 - 18:00 A photo of a vial of the AstraZeneca vaccine taken in Berlin, Germany, on March 16, 2021. © Hannibal Hanschke, Reuters Text by: Nicole TRIAN 5 min A mixed-bag of vaccine strategies that determine who gets which vaccine has emerged across the EU and the UK following revelations of possible links between AstraZeneca and rare blood clots, prompting calls for a “coherent” policy amid fears of growing confusion and lagging public confidence over vaccination rollouts. Advertising Read more A possible link between the AstraZeneca vaccine and rare blood clots has prompted governments across the EU and elsewhere to set their own national recommendations on who should receive which vaccine.

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