Scientist: asymptomatic COVID-19 does not exist, and coronavirus is a common seasonal disease - ForumDaily
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Scientist: asymptomatic COVID-19 does not exist, and coronavirus is a common seasonal disease

A study by Swiss scientist Bede Stadler reports that coronavirus is a common seasonal disease, and asymptomatic carriers do not exist: these people have immunity to the pathogen COVID-19 and cannot infect others. Writes about it ZN.

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Mistakes were made in the fight against coronavirus worldwide, said Beda Stadler, microbiologist, professor emeritus and former director of the Institute of Immunology at the University of Bern. His research published the portal of the American Academy of Medicine for extending life.

According to Stadler, a number of mistakes were made in the fight against coronavirus.

And first of all, the scientist refutes the exclusivity of the virus. The Sars-CoV-2 coronavirus is not a completely new virus, it is similar to other coronaviruses; it is like the seasonal virus that causes the common cold, which mutates and disappears in the summer. Therefore, for example, “many veterinarians were irritated by the claim that the coronavirus was new, since they had previously been vaccinating cats, dogs, pigs and cows against it for years.”

The danger of coronavirus is the lack of immunity from it, scientists believed. However, studies confirming this have not been conducted.

“It was not science, but pure speculation based on intuition, which everyone repeated one after another,” notes Stadler.

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In support of this, the scientist cites data that the new coronavirus had a lesser effect in those areas of China where SARS virus outbreaks, which caused SARS, had previously occurred.

“This is clear evidence that our immune system considers SARS and coronavirus to be at least partly similar and that one virus can protect us from the other,” he said.

The researcher also cites as an example a study by German scientists. According to it, 34% of Berliners who did not have coronavirus showed acquired immunity, for which T cells are responsible. This means that these cells, finding in Sars-CoV-2 a similar structure with the causative agents of the common cold, fight with it, says Stadler.

The fact that epidemiologists did not believe in the seasonality of coronavirus led to the creation of incorrect models and forecasts.

“When the initial worst-case scenarios have not materialized anywhere, some are still clinging to models predicting a second wave,” Stadler points out.

There are no asymptomatic carriers of coronavirus: they, like most children who are not included in the risk group, have immunity to the disease, the scientist said. The error occurred because coronavirus tests are unable to determine whether the virus is still alive or has already been suppressed by the immune system, and can end up mistaking “tiny, destroyed parts of the virus” for active disease.

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“It is likely that a large number of daily infection reports are due solely to viral debris,” Stadler points out.

“The next joke, shared by some virologists, was that those who are sick without symptoms can still infect other people. “Healthy” patients would have so much virus in their throats that a normal conversation between two people would be enough for a healthy person to infect another healthy person,” says the scientist.

If we assume that the so-called asymptomatic carriers of the virus are already suppressed, they can no longer spread the disease, says Stadler.

“Now the virus has disappeared. Perhaps it will return in the winter, but it will not be a second wave, but seasonal. Those young and healthy people who currently walk around with a mask on their face would be better off wearing a helmet, because the risk of something falling on their head is greater than the risk of becoming seriously infected with the coronavirus,” Stadler said. And in the winter, “people who are going to get sick anyway can put on their masks to show others what they have learned from this pandemic,” the scientist concluded.

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