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APO Group - Africa Newsroom / Press release | Coronavirus - Gambia: The variant strain of the SARS-CoV-2 virus first detected in the United Kingdom has been identified during sequencing in positive specimens at the National Public Health Laboratory Services

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Coronavirus - Gambia: The variant strain of the SARS-CoV-2 virus first detected in the United Kingdom has been identified during sequencing in positive specimens at the National Public Health Laboratory Services

The Ministry Of Health hereby informs the general public that, the Variant strain of the SARS-CoV-2 virus first detected in the United Kingdom has been identified during sequencing in positive specimens at the National Public Health Laboratory Services. public may note that, this new strain of the virus has been found in other countries namely, South Africa and Brazil, and may continue to be found in any other country. In The Gambia, the discovery of this variant does not until now change our current public health strategies and recommendations. The fact that the variant strain is thought to be more contagious, than the viral strains currently in wide circulation calls for reinforcing the importance of wearing a mask, social distancing outside homes and quarantining of people exposed to positive cases.

Coronavirus pandemic: WHO warns quarantine could be required for vaccinated travellers

Advertisement London: World Health Organisation scientists say that the vaccines being rolled out are extremely unlikely to eradicate COVID-19. The warning poses particular challenges for countries that have aimed to eliminate community transmission through tough border bans, enforced quarantine and lockdowns such as Australia and New Zealand. Some of the countries with the greatest coronavirus outbreaks have begun vaccinating the public, including Britain and the United States. WHO s chief scientist Dr Soumya Swaminathan thinks vaccinated travellers could still spread coronavirus. Credit:AP WHO s chief scientist Dr Soumya Swaminathan told a virtual press conference that there was no evidence yet that people who had been vaccinated could enter countries such as Australia without the risk of spreading the disease.

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