Cases of coronavirus are surging all over the world. In this regard, WHO's chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan has given a statement. All there young and healthy people should be geared up to wait their turn for immunization, experts predicted this week. The World Health Organization's chief scientist recommended that the moratorium could last over a year for some among the young and healthy. "People tend to think, ah, on the first of January or the first of April, I'm going to get a vaccine and then things will be back to normal," Soumya Swaminathan stated in an online WHO question-and-answer concourse held on Wednesday. "It's not going to work like that," she further added.
The global study of human health revealed this regarding the coronavirus
She also said, "There will be a lot of guidance coming out, but I think an average person, a healthy, young person, might have to wait until 2022 to get a vaccine." Young generation can get sick and die of covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, and can spread it. But proof implies they are less likely to suffer serious difficulties than older people or those with health problems. With an unparalleled worldwide need for a vaccine, governments and international organizations such as the WHO will have to work to assure that people most at risk get priority.
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Health-care workers and others on the front lines may go first, followed by the elderly or sick. The left healthy, young people waiting for a return to normal life may end up at the back of the line. Robin Nandy, the chief of immunization at UNICEF, stated in an interview, "Vaccines are going to be available in the initial years in too small quantities to vaccinate the 7 billion people we have across the globe today,"
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