Italy reopens nearly two months after a nationwide shutdown. Manufacturers, construction companies and some wholesalers are back open, and a lift in restrictions means children can once again play in the parks and families can reunite. Ahead we’ll speak with a blogger from Italy. But first, scientists are warning the coronavirus could be with us for years. A study issued by the University of Minnesota says if COVID-19 follows the pattern of the 1918 Spanish flu, the pandemic may last two years and result in even more deaths this fall and winter. With over a million confirmed cases in the United States, The U.S. Trump administration is working to speed up the development of a vaccine. Globally, the World Health Organization says there are over a hundred vaccines in the works, with several beginning clinical trials. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the antiviral drug, Remdesivir, as a treatment for severely ill patients after it showed some success in quickening recovery time. It’s expected to be available this week.
To discuss this:
- Rafael Perez-Escamilla is a Professor of Public Health at the Yale School of Medicine.
- Dr. Ana Cojocaru is the Chief of the Pulmonary and Critical Care Department at Prima CARE.
- Leonardo Salvaggio is a blogger based in Pavia, Italy.
For more:
HEAT PODCAST: There’s no evidence #COVID19 began in a Wuhan lab. Then why do some journalists and politicians promote this debunked theory?
@MaxBlumenthal of @TheGrayzoneNews talks on dangers of misinformation during #CoronavirusPandemic. LISTEN: https://t.co/FvdqvAWQfA— CGTN America (@cgtnamerica) May 5, 2020
An influential coronavirus model often cited by the White House has doubled its projections for US deaths, now forecasting that more than 134,000 people will die from Covid-19 by August https://t.co/9KvQKEUa9V
— CNN (@CNN) May 5, 2020
As politicians salute Italians for their solidarity during nearly two months of a shutdown to combat the coronavirus outbreak, the move to restart the country threatens to create a new divide https://t.co/nWhJlr3WNX
— Bloomberg (@business) May 3, 2020