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âDouble Mutantâ/âTriple Mutantâ/âBengal Strainâ: Why Experts Are Asking Everyone To Calm Down About SARS-CoV-2 Variants
by Swarajya Staff - Apr 25, 2021 12:31 PM
A health worker collects swab sample for Covid-19 test. (representative image)
Snapshot
Everything you need to know about the âdouble mutantâ, âtriple mutantâ, âBengal variantâ, etc, reports of which are causing worry among people.
And hereâs why experts are telling everyone to calm down.
India is being hit by a terrible second wave of Covid-19, the pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. The number of daily infections are rising rapidly and have been reported to be over three lakh for the past three days and are expected to increase further.
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NBC Universal, Inc.
Local bartender and musician, Drew Andrews, is back to work now that Whistle Stop Bar in South Park has reopened.
“I’ve been a bartender here (Whistle Stop Bar) for a number of years, 16 years now, I guess, excluding last year,” Andrews said as he reflected on the year. He was one of the first San Diegans who shared his COVID-19 diagnosis with NBC 7 in March 2020. Download our mobile app for iOS or Android to get the latest breaking news and local stories.
“It’s been a long year, a trying year, and so many things have happened. It’s strange now. It feels like it’s yesterday and forever ago at the same time,” recalled Andrews. Shortly after testing positive for COVID-19, Andrews said he joined an immunity study to help local scientists better understand how the body responds to the virus.
We know a lot about Covid-19. Experts have many more questions A transmission electron micrograph of a SARS-CoV-2 virus particle.
NIAID
Less than a year and a half ago, the world was blissfully, dangerously ignorant of the existence of a coronavirus that would soon turn life on earth on its head.
In the 16 months since the SARS-CoV-2 virus burst into the global consciousness, we’ve learned much about this new health threat. People who contract the virus are infectious before they develop symptoms and are most infectious early in their illness. Getting the public to wear masks, even homemade ones, can reduce transmission. Vaccines can be developed, tested, and put into use within months. As they say, where there’s a will, there’s a way.