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Corona: RKI mit neuen Zahlen - Familien-Kinderbonus kommt 2021
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Corona: RKI mit aktuellen Zahlen, Kinderbonus kommt - langer Lockdown?
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Airborne Infection Rate index predicts timing of second wave of pandemic
The second wave of the coronavirus pandemic has placed much blame on a lack of appropriate safety measures. However, due to the impacts of weather, research suggests two outbreaks per year during a pandemic are inevitable.
Though face masks, travel restrictions, and social distancing guidelines help slow the number of new infections in the short term, the lack of climate effects incorporated into epidemiological models presents a glaring hole that can cause long-term effects. In Physics of Fluids, from AIP Publishing, Talib Dbouk and Dimitris Drikakis, from the University of Nicosia in Cyprus, discuss the impacts of these parameters.
The weather has a bigger impact on COVID spread than social distancing, study concludes
WASHINGTON A lot of the blame for COVID-19’s “second wave” has been pointed at people not following safety guidelines put out by health experts and government officials. A new report however, says don’t blame people, blame the weather. Researchers from the University of Nicosia in Cyprus find hot weather and wind have a bigger impact on virus transmission rates than social distancing during a pandemic.
Their study concludes that two outbreaks in one year is a natural phenomenon during a massive outbreak. Temperature, humidity, and wind can help predict when a second wave will peak, which the researchers call “inevitable.”
Members of the public are more likely to share coronavirus advice with their friends if they hear it from renowned experts opposed to celebrities, a new study finds.
The reassuring research reveals Dr Anthony Fauci and Professor Chris Whitty, who are leading the coronavirus response in the US and UK, respectively, are better spokespeople than politicians and celebrities.
Swiss researchers surveyed more than 12,000 people from six countries in the last week of March 2020.
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Members of the public are more likely to share coronavirus advice with their friends if they hear it from Dr Anthony Fauci (pictured), head of the US task force than celebrities
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