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Why the world must stand united to end COVID-19
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With these coronaviruses, immunity following an infection is measured more in months than in years. Most of us can expect repeat infections with these other coronaviruses throughout our lives, typically every three to six years. Our experience with Covid-19 may end up being the same. Reinfections following an initial natural SARS-CoV-2 infection are now also being reported in the UK. Even immunisation will probably not give lifelong protection against Covid-19, and vaccine effectiveness is expected to decline over a number of months. Recent news reports from Israel suggest that the protection offered by the Pfizer vaccine may already be waning in older age groups. But protection against severe disease will probably last longer than protection against infection.
Europe is learning to stop worrying and live with coronavirus. But some countries are taking different routes to plot their return to normal.
Case numbers are once again skyrocketing, thanks to the highly transmissible Delta variant. But this is less worrying to European leaders as vaccines are keeping hospitalizations and deaths well below last year’s levels.
This means EU leaders are changing the way they view the virus, looking more at hospitalization rates rather than case numbers to assess its spread.
“200 is the new 50,” German Health Minister Jens Spahn declared last week, referring to the country s long-standing weekly benchmark of 50 new cases per 100,000 people as critical. Berlin s higher threshold reflects the fact that infections now yield far fewer hospitalizations.
Why COVID Cases Are Now Falling In The UK – And What Could Happen Next
Jul 29, 2021 01:52 AM By The Conversation
After two months of soaring COVID-19 cases in the UK, numbers have again started to fall – and to the surprise of many, fall quite dramatically. New cases peaked at 54,674 on July 17 before falling to 23,511 on July 27.
We should note that whether this decline will continue is as yet uncertain, as the effect of lifting most of England’s remaining restrictions on July 19 is yet to work its way into the statistics. We probably won’t know the impact of this until at least the last day of July.
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