The Corona virus continues to decline in the United States, as cases decrease by 41% in a week, and Dr. Rochelle Walinsky, director of the American Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, confirms that the virus will become a seasonal disease similar to the flu, according to the British newspaper “Daily Mail”. .
People in orange states wear masks
Dr. Rochelle Wallinsky, director of the CDC, said she believes the coronavirus will become a seasonal virus in the future, similar to influenza.
Like many others, Rochelle believes the virus will rise each year during the fall and winter following remaining relatively dormant for the rest of the year, with coronavirus cases down 41% over the past week in the US as Americans look forward to spring and summer. Without an increase in the virus, many hope that the epidemic may now be on the point of ending for good.
Corona in the United States
The newspaper added, the daily recorded injuries decreased by 41% over the past week, as the United States recorded an average of 42,093 cases per day. This is the lowest daily infection rate recorded nationwide since July.
Dr. Rochelle Walinsky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said: (CDC) The American, told NBC News Monday that she expects to play Corona A less present role in the lives of Americans in the near future and in the long term, instead, you believe the virus will join the common flu as a seasonal virus that people will need annual injections to manage.
“I would expect this to be probably a seasonal virus,” Walinsky said“explaining that this would turn Corona from its current epidemic stage into an endemic pandemic, experts believe that every winter there will be a rise in the number of cases, but like influenza, the infection will be relatively mild for the majority of people, it is also likely that the annual booster doses will be Available, like the flu shots that are available in pharmacies every fall too.
The average number of people hospitalized in the US is currently 37,118 people per day, a 43% drop over the past two weeks..