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The study was done nationally, but Tulane Primate Research Center played a big part in the findings Author: Jade Cunningham / WWL Eyewitness News Published: 6:34 PM CST February 10, 2021 Updated: 6:34 PM CST February 10, 2021
NEW ORLEANS Speaking, coughing, sneezing, even breathing near someone, can easily spread COVID-19. Now a new study from Tulane s National Primate Center reveals why that is. In normal breathing, we all breathe out exhaled particles, Professor Chad Roy said. You can t see them, but they re there. They re very small and many times when you re sick, those exhaled breath particles carry viruses, like COVID.
Roy co-authored the study, which looked at two species of primates sick with COVID-19. They specifically focused on the breath the animals exhaled and how the virus affects it.
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Virus Origins & Testing
Tulane virologist
ROBERT GARRY, JR., PHD, and a team of scientists from Tulane, Scripps Research Institute, Columbia University, University of Edinburgh and University of Sydney analyzed the genome sequence of the novel SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus that emerged in the city of Wuhan, China, and found no evidence that the virus was made in a laboratory or otherwise engineered. Garry and his team also initiated a new School of Medicine test and testing lab in collaboration with