Math, asked by abhisheks77, 3 months ago

When Covid 19 will end . I want to say the exact year..month..day..time..hours..min...seconds....WRONG ANSWERS WILL BE REPORTED​

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Answered by avaniaarna
1

Answer:

We all have different worries—maybe we're concerned about whether our housemate’s new cough is just allergies, or we're wondering if we calculated how to stretch what’s left of our cut salaries right, and so many more. But there’s one question unifying the world in the COVID-19 era: When will it all end?

Some moments, it feels like the answer is “soon...maybe?” As of Wednesday, all U.S. states have started to re-open to some extent. Coronavirus vaccine trials are beginning to look promising. We all know someone who has decided it's safe for them to do something we’ve been avoiding, like travel to shelter at home in a new locale or to visit family.

And yet we're still seeing thousands and thousands of new cases every day, hundreds and hundreds of new deaths. Most of us still feel anxiety on a daily basis—less so than in March, but more so than we’d like.

So when will this disrupted life with the novel coronavirus end? The reality is, we may live with some kind of threat from SARS-CoV-2 forever. (Our current benign seasonal flu is actually a variant of the Spanish flu which raged as long ago as 1918, killing 50 to 100 million people worldwide).

But the height of our pandemic has to end at some point. And while no one has an actual answer, most agree it depends on two things: when we will reach a medical solution that allows infections to end or diminish, and when our lives can go “back to normal.”

When will the infections end?

The next few months are a waiting game.

One step in the right direction is that certain infection-control measures are improving: Worldwide, everyone's trying to iron out supply chain and manufacturing issues, so hopefully frontline workers will have more access to personal protective equipment (PPE) and life-saving ventilators. We need to streamline blood and swab test production so there can be more quality control and the public can keep faith in the effectiveness of testing, says virology and microbiology expert Rodney Rohde, Ph.D., a professor at Texas State University.

According to Rohde, who has spent more than two decades dealing with infectious disease outbreaks like West Nile Virus and SARS, the medical end of the pandemic depends on three things:

Scientists developing an effective vaccine that can protect a large number of the global population (ideally, higher than 60 percent).

Manufacturers finding an effective way to mass produce and deliver said vaccine to people around the world.

Time for the global population to build a natural (herd) immunity so the virus doesn't have enough novel hosts to continue infecting large numbers at once.

How long a vaccine could realistically take

According to the World Health Organization, there are more than 100 vaccine projects in development right now and eight in actual clinical trials. One of the most promising formulas is from Moderna, who just announced early but positive results from the first phase of their clinical trial. Realistically, we're looking at summer or fall of 2021 for the protection to be ready, Rohde says.

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