Coronavirus Will Extinguish Before There Is A Vaccine, They Warn

Coronavirus Will Extinguish Before There Is A Vaccine, They Warn

John Price wrote an article in which he points out that the Covid-19 pandemic will end even before the arrival of the vaccine in Latin America.

According to an article by John Price published by AMI and translated by Infobae America, the coronavirus will be extinguished before there is a vaccine or it reaches Latin America, since at this point only progress has been made.

More people continue to lose their lives due to this virus and its antidote, only important advances are boasted, but nothing in particular, therefore, experts warn that the coronavirus will be extinguished before there is a vaccine.

The Markets of the Americas (AMI) intelligence team made a prediction of the coronavirus in Latin America, concluding that it will be extinguished before there is a vaccine , since seven months after the virus appeared, studies continue.

You can see: WHO says when they will begin to vaccinate against the Coronavirus.

Coronavirus
Coronavirus will be extinguished before there is a vaccine, they warn. Photo: AFP.

In the article written by John Price, the two ways to reach the threshold of herd immunity against the pandemic are pointed out, which were generalized vaccination or the infection of 60% of the population, only then the virus would become extinct when not have new hosts.

From John Price’s point of view, countries such as the United States, Africa and Asia, as well as Latin America, attended late to the arrival of the virus to the nations, causing the tipping point of the disease long before the vaccine is a reality.

But faced with this fatalistic scenario, it is also proposed that although thousands of lives will be lost, society would be immune to a second wave of coronavirus and its economy will improve more quickly.

It also means that these countries will be immune to a possible second wave of the coronavirus. Ironically, these nations that were unable to contain the virus may see their economies open up more than the countries that were successful.

Latin America was one of the parts of the world most affected by covid-19, not only due to the disease itself, but also suffered a severe blow to its economy due to the strict quarantine they underwent.

Latin American economies have between 40 and 80% of their workforce in informality and cannot function in isolation. Not only are there few jobs that can be done from home, but the informal unemployed lack a social safety net.

Another point that the article highlights is that in the case of countries like Mexico and Brazil, the policies between the central government and regional governments were not entirely clear, achieving confusion and immediate action in the face of the coronavirus.