Sursa foto: IMPACT
Doctor Adrian Streinu-Cercel said on Sunday, after being vaccinated with a second dose against COVID-19, that seven days after the booster dose is administered there is no longer any risk of developing severe forms of COVID-19. Theoretically, seven days after the booster dose we can breathe a sigh of relief because we are no longer at risk of developing severe infections with the novel coronavirus. But beware, the mask will remain mandatory (.) until 2023, because this vaccine protects us from the inside, it does not protect our mucous membranes, so if we take the mask off and give up on it, we will stand a great chance of getting a virus that we will then pass on to people who are not immunised and we will continue to generate disease, Streinu-Cercel said at the Matei Bals National Institute of Infectious Diseases in Bucharest.
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The Latest: US coronavirus cases top 19 million mark
By Staff | Dec 28, 2020
Registered nurse Leslie Clark puts on a new pair of protective gloves after collecting a nasal swab sample at a COVID-19 testing site in Los Angeles, Sunday, Dec. 27, 2020. Hospitals in central and Southern California are quickly running out of intensive care unit beds for coronavirus patients and state officials are poised to extend the strictest stay-at-home orders there as conditions worsen before the post-holiday surge hits. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
BALTIMORE The U.S. has now topped 19 million coronavirus cases since the pandemic began, data compiled by Johns Hopkins University shows.