WHO mission back with info on how the pandemic began

Tempo Desk
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TEN international experts – epidemiologists, animal and human disease experts, medical doctors and virologists – from ten countries, joined five World Health Organization (WHO) experts, two representatives of the Food and Agriculture Or­ganization (FAO) and two from the World Health Organization for Animal Health in the recent WHO mission to look into the beginnings of the COVID-19 pan­demic in Wuhan, China.The WHO mission repre­sented the concern of the 194 member states of the United Nations to get to the genesis of the COVID-19 virus, get more information about the disease to help in eliminating it and in responding to future pandem­ics.At the end of the mission, the WHO group said: (1) it was “extremely unlikely” that the virus had leaked from the Wu­han Institute of Virology; (2) bats remain a likely source; (3) transmission of the virus via frozen food is a possibility that warrants further investigation; and (4) there is “need to ensure we are looking beyond the bor­ders of China as well as within China.”The 40-page “Report of the WHO-China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019” pro­vided an analysis and recom­mendations expected to further advance mankind’s knowledge and capabilities in future epi­demiological crises with early detection and mitigation mea­sures.The WHO team leaders made a point of dispelling aspersions on China cast in some early media reports. British expert on disease ecology Dr. Peter Daszak said: “As lead of the animal/environment working group, I found trust and openness with my China counterparts. We got access to critical new data throughout.”China was the first country to investigate the virus when it was thought to be ordinary flu, providing the world with the virus’ genetic data in early January, 2020, and the series of lockdowns that followed in China It subsequently made four proposals for fighting the pandemic, as follows: coopera­tion in the fight against COVID-19, full implementation of UN Security Council resolutions and creation of a favorable environ­ment for fighting the pandemic, solving the vaccine deficit and increasing assistance to devel­oping countries, and giving full play to the role of the United Nations system.More than a year after the COVID-19 virus emerged in Chi­na, the world is now moving to face new challenges, notably the need for more effective vac­cines. The world continues to be tested by the pandemic, this time with challenges in vaccine supply – in the face of high costs and inadequacy of supply.The WHO mission to China has returned with informa­tion about the beginnings of the virus. The need now is for greater cooperation among nations to reach more of the world’s billions of people in urgent need of the vaccines to stop the pandemic.

TEN international experts – epidemiologists, animal and human disease experts, medical doctors and virologists – from ten countries, joined five World Health Organization (WHO) experts, two representatives of the Food and Agriculture Or­ganization (FAO) and two from the World Health Organization for Animal Health in the recent WHO mission to look into the beginnings of the COVID-19 pan­demic in Wuhan, China.

The WHO mission repre­sented the concern of the 194 member states of the United Nations to get to the genesis of the COVID-19 virus, get more information about the disease to help in eliminating it and in responding to future pandem­ics.

At the end of the mission, the WHO group said: (1) it was “extremely unlikely” that the virus had leaked from the Wu­han Institute of Virology; (2) bats remain a likely source; (3) transmission of the virus via frozen food is a possibility that warrants further investigation; and (4) there is “need to ensure we are looking beyond the bor­ders of China as well as within China.”

The 40-page “Report of the WHO-China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019” pro­vided an analysis and recom­mendations expected to further advance mankind’s knowledge and capabilities in future epi­demiological crises with early detection and mitigation mea­sures.

The WHO team leaders made a point of dispelling aspersions on China cast in some early media reports. British expert on disease ecology Dr. Peter Daszak said: “As lead of the animal/environment working group, I found trust and openness with my China counterparts. We got access to critical new data throughout.”

China was the first country to investigate the virus when it was thought to be ordinary flu, providing the world with the virus’ genetic data in early January, 2020, and the series of lockdowns that followed in China It subsequently made four proposals for fighting the pandemic, as follows: coopera­tion in the fight against COVID-19, full implementation of UN Security Council resolutions and creation of a favorable environ­ment for fighting the pandemic, solving the vaccine deficit and increasing assistance to devel­oping countries, and giving full play to the role of the United Nations system.

More than a year after the COVID-19 virus emerged in Chi­na, the world is now moving to face new challenges, notably the need for more effective vac­cines. The world continues to be tested by the pandemic, this time with challenges in vaccine supply – in the face of high costs and inadequacy of supply.

The WHO mission to China has returned with informa­tion about the beginnings of the virus. The need now is for greater cooperation among nations to reach more of the world’s billions of people in urgent need of the vaccines to stop the pandemic.

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