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Wie Schleimhaut-Impfstoffe den Verlauf der Pandemie verändern könnten
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themselves and others. it s such a good question about protection, particularly about protecting others, protecting those that are actually most vulnerable. masks work. they protect the person who is wearing them from inhaling a lot of virus particles. and they protect us from exhaling virus should we be symptomatic and not know it. so masks are a good layer of protection, not perfect, but obviously when we have very high rates of transmission like we do now, it s a sensible step and an easy step to take to keep ourselves safe, and just as important, to keep the community safe with these very high rates, unless we start seeing a slowdown in spread, a slowdown in what s happening in our hospitals, in two weeks we ll do a universe indoor masking here. and again, that will be aligned fully with cdc. so you do see it sounded like you have certainty, you do
like covid, where we know people were passing that on before they even knew they had it and had any symptoms. when you are actually symptomatic, that is when you are infectious. the markers of that our people tend to have a fever, they tend to have a flu like illness, they feel a bit cold and chivalry, muscle aches and pains. also, you get a rash. the rash can vary, in some people more dramatic than others, but it is little blisters, almost like spots and pimples, and those are crammed with virus particles, so you can be briefed on ljy particles, so you can be briefed on by somebody or if you have contact with those blisters and what is on them and that gets onto your skin or elsewhere, then you can catch it by that route and one other possibility and we know this because the family of viruses to which this belongs attempts to spread this way, you leave behind an infectious legacy on your bedclothes and on your clothes, and so if someone handles bedlinen or something that has been in c
in some people, more dramatic than others, but it s little blisters or almost like spots and pimples. and those are crammed with virus particles, so you can breathe on somebody or if you have contact with those blisters and what s in them and that gets onto your skin or elsewhere, they can catch it via that route. and one possibility and we know this because the family of viruses to which this belongs tends to spread this way, you leave behind an infectious legacy on your bedclothes and on your clothes. and so, if someone handles bed linen or clothing that s been in close contact with someone while they were infectious, there will be some viral residue on there that could pass the infection on as well. let s get more on transmission. maria van kerkhove is a who expert on emerging diseases. transmission is really happening from close physical contact, - skin to skin contact. so, it s not. it s quite different - from covid in that sense. and what we are seeing our case - is being detecte
symptoms after finishing the five-day regimen. do you advise people to take paxlovid? yeah, if they re older and certainly have comorbidities or health problems that put them at risk of serious disease, absolutely. the antivirals are not antibiotics. antibiotics can kill bacteria. what this does is decreases the virus s capacity to reproduce itself. when you stop, there may still be some virus particles that can reproduce themselves. this has been reported. there was essentially a rebound of about 2%. which when you now give the product to tens of thousands of people, now you re seeing many people that are having this problem. but again, it s still, although there s a rebound, it s still not nearly as severe as not treating. doctor, thanks so much. coming up next, what we re learning the suspected buffalo shooter did just minutes before his deadly racist rampage, and
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