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Showing posts with label Coronavirus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coronavirus. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2020

How long can the coronavirus survive on surfaces?

How long can the coronavirus survive on surfaces?

How-long-can-the-coronavirus-survive-on-surfaces

     Several studies have attempted to estimate how long the COVID-19 virus remained infectious on inert surfaces, but the figures are more complex to understand than they first appear.

     Is there a risk of becoming infected by touching surfaces with hands that are or have been in contact with Covid-19 patients?

     This is possible, based on studies that have attempted to determine the duration of "survival" of Sars CoV-2 on inanimate surfaces.

     But even if the risk exists, these durations should not be taken literally and should be put into perspective with the way researchers are trying to measure them.

How long can the virus survive on surfaces and objects?

     It should be made clear at the outset that it is inappropriate to speak of the "survival" of the virus since the virus is not really "alive".

     "Rather, we are talking about maintaining infectivity, how long it remains infectious," says Astrid Vabret, head of the virology department at Caen University Hospital and coronavirus specialist.

     The stability of the SARS-CoV-2 virus (responsible for Covid-19 disease) depends on the type of surface considered, according to the two main scientific studies published to date on the subject.

     The first, published on February 6 in the Journal of Hospital Infection, tested the virus on eight different surfaces and compared it to other coronaviruses (such as those responsible for SARS 2003 or MERS 2012).

     Researchers have found viable strains of the virus up to five days after spraying steel, glass, or ceramics

     Results show that the virus can persist on these surfaces for between two hours and six days (less if the ambient temperature approaches 30°C).

     Researchers found viable strains of the virus up to five days after spraying steel, glass or ceramics, without being able to measure how much was found on each of these surfaces.

     The results were quite variable (two to six days) for plastic, while on latex and aluminum, a few hours were sufficient to kill all strains.

     A second study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine on March 17, tested the resistance of the virus on other materials, such as cardboard and copper, or in the air by aerosol spraying.

     The results show shorter persistence times than those published in previous studies, ranging from three hours (aerosols) to a maximum of three days (steel, plastic), with intermediate values (twenty-four hours for cardboard) for the same amount of virus sprayed.

     But the two studies agree on one point: plastic and steel are the surfaces where the virus has been stable for the longest time.

     A third publication, from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, recently reported that the genetic material of the virus had been detected in the infected passenger cabins of the Diamond-Princess ship, where 3,700 people were quarantined in February until 17 days after they left.

     But it is not possible to infer that transmission from these contaminated surfaces occurred, the authors of the study said, calling for further investigation.

     As the material conditions (e.g. temperature, humidity) are not known, it is relatively difficult to assess the validity of such a duration, and any conclusion would be imprudent and hasty at best, or at worst totally false.


     "We can't even be sure that the virus we find can reinfect. It's far too vague," says Bruno Grandbastien, medical officer of health and president of the French Society of Hospital Hygiene.

     "You mustn't cling to a specific number, because it doesn't correspond to anything in life."

     What, then, should we think of the durations evoked in these two studies? These studies are important to give an idea, an order of magnitude of the time during which the virus remains infectious," replies Astrid Vabret.

     We shouldn't cling to a precise figure, because it doesn't correspond to anything in the living world.

     The interest of these studies is that the way of counting is the same throughout the duration of the experiment, the comparison between two surfaces remains valid. »

     "The doses are rather representative of a real situation since it is estimated that this order of magnitude will be found in nasal swabs," says Dr. Grandbastien.

     But the doctor points out that the duration of persistence in aerosols is probably longer than in reality. "We don't find aerosols as fine as that in reality, because this virus is transmitted via large droplets which, by gravity, will fall back more quickly. »

     In summary, depending on the surface, the SARS-CoV-2 virus can persist for approximately :


coronavirus-survive-on-surfaces-plastic


coronavirus-survive-on-surfaces-paper-cardboard

coronavirus-survive-on-surfaces-copper

coronavirus-survive-on-surfaces-stainless-steel

coronavirus-survive-on-surfaces-aluminium

coronavirus-survive-on-surfaces-glass-ceramics

What are the risks of contamination?

     This is the central question, but it is also a question that is very difficult to answer. In their study, the researchers make it clear that the transmissibility of the virus to people who come into contact with infected surfaces has not been demonstrated due to a lack of data.

"The real problem is that we don't know the infective dose."


     The real problem is that we don't know the infecting dose," says virologist Astrid Vabret, "which is the amount of virus sufficient to generate an infection.

     But this changes the way you interpret how long the virus persists: if the infecting dose is low, it would mean that a surface remains infectious for much longer than if the infecting dose is high.

     "The transmission of a virus is a complex phenomenon that is very difficult to quantify. We don't know how many viruses it takes to generate an infection in contact with the mucous membrane.

     It's probably not the same for different people. You have an enormous diversity of everything: local defenses vary depending on the individual, as does the state of their mucous membranes. »

     A point confirmed by Bruno Grandbastien. "We have zero data on this, we just know that there is a gradient: the higher the viral load, the greater the risk of infection. But it's highly variable depending on the virus. »

Do we have to clean all the products we touch?

     This is a question many people ask themselves after receiving WhatsApp or Facebook messages recommending to "leave groceries in your car for 1.5 hours" and then "pass everything that may have been touched by others with diluted bleach".

     This recommendation is anxiety-provoking and excessive, according to Professor Vabret: "If you wash your hands regularly, and don't put them to your mouth, you eliminate what you could have picked up. »

     "We are not in a situation where we are asked to disinfect the food we eat, there is no risk of becoming infected through ingestion".

     This information is not at all scientifically supported," says Bruno Grandbastien. We are not in a situation where we are asked to disinfect the food we eat, there is no risk of becoming infected through ingestion.

     On the other hand, we can recommend washing both the products we have touched and our hands, which are basic hygiene rules that should be applied outside of any epidemic. »

     Leaving your shopping for an hour and a half in the car is therefore useless given the persistence of the virus on cardboard and plastic surfaces: it is above all recommended to wash your hands after shopping, as they are the main vector of transmission.

     Cleaning or even disinfecting work surfaces that we often come into contact with do not seem unreasonable either.


     For the most worried, even if the risk is "absolutely minimal" according to Anne Goffard, a virologist at the Lille University Hospital, interviewed by France Culture, cleaning cardboard or plastic packaging brought in from outside contributes theoretically to further minimize the risk; remembering all the same that the capacity of the virus present on surfaces to infect the organism has not been established at all.

     As for textiles, there is no scientific data on the ability of the virus to resist it. The virus is easily destroyed at temperatures as low as 30°C, according to Dr. Georgine Nanos, interviewed by HuffPost. It is, therefore, unnecessary to opt for washing programs at 60°C.

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Coronavirus: a Russian disinformation campaign would agitate the Web

Coronavirus: a Russian disinformation campaign would agitate the Web

Russian-disinformation-campaign

     According to European diplomats, the Kremlin is trying to use the crisis to sow chaos and discord within Europe through rumors and misinformation.

     Are Russian trolls taking advantage of the pandemic to distill their information poison? According to the European Union, the answer is yes.

     According to a report of analysis carried out by its diplomatic staff, and recovered by Reuters, the Russian media would have set in motion a "major disinformation campaign" to aggravate the impact of the coronavirus, generate panic and sow mistrust in Western countries.

     According to the nine-page document, the campaign is spreading false information in English, Spanish, Italian, German and French.

     "The primary objective of the Kremlin's misinformation is to worsen the public health crisis in Western countries (...) in line with the Kremlin's broader strategy of trying to overthrow European societies," the authors wrote.

    They have documented more than 80 cases of misinformation since 22 January.

     This false information has been listed on the EuvsDisinfo.eu website, which is maintained by European diplomats.

     More than a hundred cases are currently listed. Many of the ideas conveyed are conspiratorial: SARS-CoV-2 is said to be a biological weapon of American or British origin, the epidemic was brought to Lithuania by an American soldier, the pharmaceutical industry is exaggerating the crisis to increase drug sales, Italy is exaggerating the crisis to get European subsidies, and so on.

     Other messages - more or less contradictory - seek only to generate fear.

coronavirus-rumors
     EUvsDisinfo.eu - Latest news on coronavirus Rumors

     It would soon be the end of the world, Pope Francis would be ill and about to die, the European Union would be unable to manage the crisis, the political institutions would be on the verge of collapse, the political leaders would take advantage of the coronavirus to establish a dictatorship, etc.

     For its part, the Russian government has obviously rejected these accusations outright.

     "The Kremlin's spokesman Dimitri Peskov told Reuters: "These are again unfounded allegations which, in the current situation, are probably the result of an anti-Russian obsession.

     Moreover, not all Western experts fully agree with the European Union's analysis.

     Questioned by Deutsche Welle, Ben Nimmo, a member of the Atlantic Council think-tank, thinks that there is no special campaign led by the Kremlin, but that this is simply the daily work of Russian trolls.

     A normal and natural kind of animosity. Which is not necessarily more reassuring.

Sources: Reuters, Deutsche Welle

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Coronavirus: Prince Charles tested positive for Covid-19, announces British royal family

Coronavirus: Prince Charles tested positive for Covid-19, announces British royal family

Prince-Charles
     Piscine Wpa / Getty Images

     Prince Charles tested positive for coronavirus on Wednesday, March 25, 2020.

     The United Kingdom is in shock. In an official statement, the services of Harry and William's father reported that he is "showing mild symptoms" of a new coronavirus.

     The heir to the British crown was unable to pass the virus on to his 93-year-old mother, whom he has not seen since 12 March. Given the incubation period, he was not contagious at that time.

     At 71 years of age, Prince Charles "remains in good health", except for these symptoms, Clarence House assured in a statement relayed by the British media The Guardian.

     "In accordance with government measures and medical advice, the Prince and Duchess are isolating themselves at home in Scotland," the Clarence House statement said.

     Prince Charles arrived at his residence in Birkhall on Sunday. He was tested the next day.

     "It is not possible to know by whom the Prince contracted the virus, due to the high number of engagements he has carried out in the last few weeks," the statement continued.

     The tabloid The Mirror says that Camilla Parker-Bowles, the Duchess of Cornwall, tested "negative" for the coronavirus.

          Pool New / Reuters

     Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall attend the Commonwealth Reception at Marlborough House in London on March 9.

     Both spouses are confined to the same house but in "separate" apartments in Scotland.

Buckingham Palace declared the Queen herself to be in good health.

     "The Queen last saw the Prince of Wales briefly on the morning of March 12 and is following all appropriate advice concerning her well-being," a statement said.

     At least 8,000 people have tested positive for the coronavirus in the UK and 422 people have died.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Spreading the message: Five steps to eliminate coronavirus

Spreading the message: Five steps to eliminate coronavirus

FIFA-WHO

23 March 2020 Press release

     FIFA and the World Health Organisation (WHO) have joined forces to combat the coronavirus (Covid-19).

     The two entities are launching a new awareness campaign led by world-class footballers, calling on all people around the world to follow five key measures to stop the spread of the virus.

     The "Spread the Message to Stop Coronavirus" campaign aims to safeguard the health of all people in line with WHO recommendations and includes the following five key messages: wash your hands, cover your mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing, avoid touching your face, keep your distance and stay home when you feel unwell.

     "From the very beginning, FIFA and its President, Gianni Infantino, have been actively involved in spreading the message against this pandemic," said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of WHO, at the virtual launch of the campaign at WHO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland.

     "FIFA is fighting the coronavirus through a series of campaigns and funding, and I am delighted that world football is helping WHO to eliminate the virus.

     I am confident that with this kind of support, we will win together. »

     "Teamwork is essential in the fight against coronavirus," said FIFA President Gianni Infantino.

     "FIFA has joined forces with the WHO because health comes first.

     I call on the world football community to join us and support this campaign to spread this message more widely.

     Many of the world's great footballers have been keen to take part in this campaign and join forces to spread the message and eliminate Covid-19. »

Here is the list of twenty-eight players appearing in the video campaign, which will be published in 13 languages.


Sami Al-Jaber (KSA)       Alisson Becker (BRA)

Emre Belözoğlu (TUR)   Jared Borgetti (MEX)

Gianluigi Buffon (ITA)   Iker Casillas (ESP)

Sunil Chhetri (IND)         Youri Djorkaeff (FRA)

Han Duan (CHN)               Samuel Eto'o (RMC)

Radamel Falcao (COL)    Laura Georges (FRA)

Valeri Karpine (RUS)      Miroslav Klose (GER)

Philipp Lahm (GER)        Gary Lineker (ENG)

Carli Lloyd (USA)              Lionel Messi (ARG)

Mido (EGY)                          Michael Owen (ENG)

Park Ji-sung (KOR)         Carles Puyol (ESP)

Célia Šašić (GER)              Asako Takakura (JPN)

Yaya Touré (CIV)              Juan Sebastián Verón (ARG)

Sun Wen (CHN)                 Xavi Hernández (ESP)

     The video campaign, which will be published on the digital channels of FIFA and the players involved, is also being provided as individual localized files to FIFA's 211 member associations and media agencies - accompanied by a graphic toolkit - for social media distribution to get the message across.

wash your hands

     "It starts with the hands," says Alisson Becker, WHO Goodwill Ambassador for Health Promotion, the goalkeeper for Liverpool FC and Brazil, and winner of The Best - FIFA Goalkeeper of the Year 2019.

     "Please wash them frequently, with soap or a hydro-alcoholic solution. »

     Washing your hands frequently with soap and water - or preferably with a hydro-alcoholic solution - removes viruses that may be on your hands. It's simple, but also very important.

Elbow

     "With your elbows bent, please cover your mouth and nose when you cough or sneeze," says Carli Lloyd, two-time winner of the Women's World Cup FIFA™ with the United States.

     "If you use a tissue, throw it away immediately after use and wash your hands. »

     The droplets spread the coronavirus. By adopting good respiratory hygiene, you protect those around you from viruses such as colds, flu or coronavirus.

Face

     "For the face, avoid touching the eyes, nose, and mouth. This can prevent the virus from entering your body," adds Barcelona and Argentina striker Lionel Messi, multiple FIFA Ballon d'Or winner and winner of The Best - FIFA Player of the Year 2019.

     Your hands are in contact with a lot of surfaces covered with viruses. Once your hands are infected, the virus quickly finds its way to your face, where it can enter your body and make you sick.

Distance

     "In terms of social interaction, please keep your distance," recommends Han Duan, who has represented China PR 188 times in an 11-year international career. "A distance of at least one meter should be kept from anyone who coughs or sneezes".

     By maintaining such a distance, you will avoid inhaling droplets from someone sneezing or coughing nearby.

Felt - know your symptoms

     "If you don't feel well, stay at home," concludes Samuel Eto'o, a former Barcelona striker with 114 caps for Cameroon.

     "Please follow all instructions issued by the local health authorities. »

     If you have a fever, cough and difficulty breathing, see a doctor but call ahead.

     Stay informed - the local health authorities provide regular updates on the situation in your area. Follow their specific instructions and call ahead to allow them to redirect you to the nearest health facility.

     This will help protect you and prevent the spread of the virus and other infections.

     FIFA has also pledged USD 10 million to support the WHO solidarity fund for the fight against coronavirus disease (Covid-19).

Read also:Coronavirus: Side effects of chloroquine Researchers between hope and mistrust

Source: World Health Organization " WHO "

Sunday, March 22, 2020

Coronavirus: Side effects of chloroquine Researchers between hope and mistrust

Coronavirus: Side effects of chloroquine Researchers between hope and mistrust

Stay-at-home

     While research on a vaccine continues, chloroquine is showing promising results against coronavirus. The drug is currently undergoing urgent evaluation to obtain reliable data.

[Updated March 22, 2020]

What is the treatment for the coronavirus disease?

     Chloroquine, an anti-malarial drug, has been giving hopes of a "cure" for a few days and is now facing numerous studies to provide relevant scientific data against the coronavirus.

     Olivier Véran, French Minister of Solidarity and Health, explained in his press briefing on Saturday 21 March that the study by Professor Raoult, the initiator of the research, would be tested "on a larger scale": "I asked that Professor Raoult's study could be reproduced [...] in other hospitals, by other independent teams.

     I am following this extremely closely." The minister said he hoped to have results within a fortnight. These comments follow those of Jérôme Salomon, who said on Friday 20 March that France had requested "an emergency assessment" in order to "rapidly acquire reliable scientific knowledge on the effectiveness or otherwise of these molecules".

     It should also be noted that the French laboratory Sanofi undertook on Tuesday, March 17 to supply millions of doses of the antimalarial drug Plaquenil, which could potentially treat 300,000 patients.

     This study will join the European Discovery trial being conducted by the medical research institute as part of the multidisciplinary Reacting consortium.

     The government confirms that accelerated authorization for a large-scale randomized clinical trial supervised by Inserm will be granted this Tuesday.

     This vast research should involve around 800 French patients and a few university hospitals for the moment.

A promising study in Marseille

     In France, it all started with Professor Raoult, director of the IHU Mediterranean Infection in Marseille.

     For six days, he injected about 20 Covid-19 patients with a dose of 600mg/day of Plaquenil (the name of the drug marketed with a molecule derived from chloroquine).

     "It's spectacular, the average viral load with this virus is normally 20 days. [...] Patients who have not received Plaquenil are still 90% carriers of the virus after six days, while those who have received the treatment are 25% to be positive," explained the doctor on March 16, 2020.

     The IHU director combined chloroquine with an azythromicyne treatment "to avoid bacterial superinfections".

     If in France this study starts in Marseille, studies have already been conducted in China, Iran, South Korea, Saudi Arabia.

     In an interview with Marianne, the Professor expressed his annoyance: "Ignoring what the Chinese have said about chloroquine is delusional.

     They were the ones who had the patients to experiment, not us.

     " A team of pharmacologists from the University Hospital of Qingdao (Shandong Province - China) has recently made spectacularly enthusiastic announcements: "Chloroquine phosphate has been shown to have apparent efficacy and acceptable safety against Covid-19-associated pneumonia in multicenter clinical trials in China", they published.

     Dr. Raoult told Le Monde that there is no clinical barrier to the molecule being inserted into treatments.

     "In China, Iran, South Korea, and Saudi Arabia, hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine are already part of therapeutic protocols, advised by experts, some of them world-renowned.

Use of chloroquine too risky right now?

coronavirus-cure-Chloroquine
     Proof of the government's caution, the extensive tests desired and authorized by Olivier Véran will be carried out with a team independent of Professor Raoult.

     In any case, opinion seems to be shared by a good number of health professionals: chloroquine should not be considered, for the time being, a miracle drug against the coronavirus.

Side effects of chloroquine

     It should also be borne in mind that chloroquine can cause serious side effects if overdosed or misused.

     Very negative reactions are feared in case of interactions with other drugs, especially for patients in intensive care units.

     The molecule would in particular cause in bad dosage: nausea, vomiting, immune system disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, liver disorders, and even hematological disorders.

     The lack of supervision of the first clinical trials is particularly criticized.

     "The development of the drug is supervised for the safety of the patient and public health. Short-circuiting it in this way is a return to the Middle Ages for the drug.

     This is irresponsible and serious," tweeted Antoine Flahault, director of the Institute of global health in Geneva.

     Faced with his detractors, Didier Raoult replied in Marianne: "Chloroquine is very well known. [...] Side effects on the eye never occur with prescriptions lasting around ten days like those we would have to deal with in the case of the coronavirus: they occur after five years, in 1% of patients.

     There may be contraindications to Cordarone [Note: heart medication]. But all this is very derisory compared to the positive effects that this drug could bring us," he argues.

     And the professor assures: "The real risk would rather be to test new molecules whose toxicity we don't know."

Trump already wants to put chloroquine on the market...

Coronavirus_Chloroquine
     The American President is clearly not taking the same precautions as those put forward by the French health authorities.

     On Thursday 19 March, Donald Trump assured that the health authorities had "approved" the use of chloroquine, which, according to him, "has shown very, very encouraging preliminary results".

     He added at a press conference: "We are going to be able to make this drug available almost immediately".

     However, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has qualified the head of state's comments.

     "The President has asked us to take a closer look at this drug. We want to do this by setting up an extensive and pragmatic clinical trial," the FDA said, saying it would above all guarantee the marketing of "safe and effective products".

     This decision taken by the United States is the direct consequence of the study and the promising results of Professor Didier Raoult who confirmed it and who obviously welcomed this decision in his interview for Marianne: "I am happy on a personal level, but above all for the United States and the lives potentially saved".

Read Also:Spreading the message: Five steps to eliminate coronavirus

     The United States also learned about the tests very quickly thanks to living statements on Fox News by Gregory Rigano of Stanford Medical University.

Friday, March 20, 2020

Coronavirus: After Netflix, YouTube will also reduce the quality of its streaming video to relieve the internet

Coronavirus: After Netflix, YouTube will also reduce the quality of its streaming video to relieve the internet

youtube_video_streams

     Netflix and youtube have decided to voluntarily lower the quality of its video streams in Europe for a period of 30 days, by reducing the "bit rate", i.e. the amount of digital data sent per second (between 8 and 18 Mbit/s for HD for example).

     The aim is to drastically reduce the traffic generated by home-bound users.

     The tech giants are taking steps to prevent networks from being overloaded, while Internet use explodes during this period of containment, which concerns more and more countries.

     Netflix said on Thursday 19 March that it would reduce the quality of its video streaming in Europe for 30 days.

     This Friday, it's YouTube's turn to announce that its player will automatically switch to standard resolution when you watch a video, according to Reuters.

     This measure concerns the entire European Union as well as the United Kingdom, for a period of 30 days.

     The decision (and that of Netflix) comes after EU Commissioner Thierry Breton called on video streaming giants to reduce their bandwidth consumption in order to preserve the Internet.

     "In times of containment with COVID-19, teleworking and streaming are very useful, but the infrastructure can be put under severe strain," the former France Telecom CEO tweeted on Thursday, following a phone conversation with Netflix CEO Reed Hastings.

     "We estimate that this will reduce Netflix traffic on European networks by approximately 25% while ensuring good quality for our users," Netflix said in a release.


Netflix_video_streams

     "I warmly welcome the initiative that Google has taken to preserve the proper functioning of the Internet during the COVID-19 crisis," reacted this Friday Thierry Breton, quoted by Reuters.

     The measure does not seem, at the time of writing, by still applied. When it will be, it should still be possible to switch back to high definition if you wish, by clicking on the cogwheel at the bottom of the YouTube player, then on "quality".

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Coronavirus pandemic: Containment Greatly Increases Movies Piracy - Contagion -

Coronavirus pandemic: containment Greatly Increases Movies Piracy - Contagion -

contagion_film

     The obligation to stay at home causes a rush to illegal streaming and download services, one of the most pirated films is "Contagion", a 2011 feature film by Steven Soderbergh.

     In response to the coronavirus threat, Italy issued a nationwide ban, forcing many people to stay indoors.

     This policy led to an increase in Internet traffic, including a spike in interest in pirate sites. 


     
     At the same time, the coronavirus continues to spark interest in the movie Contagion, which reappears in the weekly list of the top ten most pirated movies after nearly a decade.

     The coronavirus pandemic is leading to unprecedented situations around the world as governments implement far-reaching measures to contain the threat.

     These measures are creating new realities affecting many industries. However, most people understand and agree that they are being taken in their best interests.

     Health care workers are working overtime, for which they are rightly applauded.

     At the same time, however, others are encouraged or even forced to stay indoors to limit the spread of infection.

     As you might have expected, but nowhere is the proof: containment encourages content piracy.

     Forced to stay at home for a week, Italians are very interested in illegal streaming services such as Eurostreaming, Guardaserie or Filmpertutti.

     According to TorrentFreak, Google searches on these terms have exploded in recent days.

     Widely used for illegal downloading, the "Real Debrid" service - which allows premium access to be shared on file-sharing platforms - is also facing a 20% increase in traffic.

     But the Covid-19 not only encourages piracy, but it also influences the choice of pirated content.

     The disaster movie Contagion, which dates from 2011, is now among the week's top ten most pirated films.

     This is the first time that a film this old has managed to position itself in these TorrentFreak statistics.

     Not only has traffic to pirate sites and services increased, but the nature of the current pandemic has also sparked interest in specific content.

     We previously reported that the number of downloads of the movie "Contagion" had increased significantly, and this trend continues.

     After the popular torrent release group YTS released two new clips of "Contagion" last week, the film has been downloaded hundreds of thousands of times, enough to earn a place in our weekly top 10 most pirated movies.

     This is an unprecedented list, as the film is almost a decade old. Never before has an older film made the list of the best, years after its first appearance.

     It is clear that the coronavirus epidemic is affecting most parts of the world, seriously disrupting society.

     While these changes in piracy habits and streaming patterns are worth documenting, they are of course completely insignificant in the grand scheme of things.

Friday, March 13, 2020

Coronavirus pandemic: The World Comes To a Standstill, Psychosis Progresses

Coronavirus pandemic: The World Comes To a Standstill, Psychosis Progresses

Coronavirus_Sport

     Schools, transport, sports, and cultural gatherings... the planet accelerated on Thursday a withdrawal into itself to the height of the psychosis created by the pandemic of the new coronavirus, which caused a historic crash of the world's stock markets.

     The scattered restrictions and market panic were compounded by the temporary ban on entry into the United States of travelers from Europe, issued Wednesday evening in Washington by Donald Trump, which triggered a shock that spread to all continents.

Coronavirus Pandemic COVID-19: 9 Symptoms To Watch For

     With more than 130,000 people infected, nearly 5,000 deaths and infections now spreading from Scandinavia to India, from Latin America to the Far East, governments were scrambling to curb the spread of Covid-19 disease.

     France, through its president Emmanuel Macron, joined in the evening the list of countries whose schools, nurseries and universities will close. 

     The head of state of one of the countries most affected in Europe by the pandemic asked seniors over 70 years old to stay at home, without however deciding to postpone the first round of municipal elections, scheduled for Sunday.


     Probable border closures are likely to be necessary for the coming days or weeks, "but they will have to be taken on a European scale," announced Mr. Macron, who assured that the EU will have to react "strongly and quickly" to overcome the global economic crisis caused by the pandemic. 

     On the leaders' side, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, the wife of the Canadian Prime Minister, tested positive for the coronavirus, with "moderate" symptoms, and will, therefore, remain in quarantine. 

Justin Trudeau "is healthy and shows no symptoms. 

     However, as a precautionary measure and on the advice of doctors, he will be in isolation for an expected 14 days," the Prime Minister's Office announced.

     Around the world, especially in Europe, where more than 20,000 cases have already been reported, the epidemic is continuing its inexorable progression, disrupting people's daily lives, from travel restrictions to border closures. 

     In New York, for example, emblematic places have announced their closure, such as the Metropolitan Museum and Broadway theatres, and all gatherings of more than 500 people have been banned. 

     Disneyland amusement parks in California, Florida and near Paris are also being closed as a precautionary measure.

     In Austria, the ski resorts in the Tyrol will be closed in advance, while in Belgium social venues such as restaurants and cafés will be closed. 

     In Rome, all churches have closed their doors to the faithful until 3 April. The Mormon Church has announced the suspension of all its public ceremonies worldwide until further notice.


     Italy recorded its thousandth death on Thursday, between 5,000 and 10,000 people are likely to be infected in the United Kingdom - where only 590 cases are recorded - according to the government, and the number of cases has exploded in Spain.

     The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) warned on Thursday of a "high" risk that the health system in the EU and the UK could be overwhelmed by the epidemic.

     In China, however, the starting point of the epidemic, the number of new infections fell to 15 on Thursday, the lowest since mid-January.

     The European Central Bank (ECB) announced on Thursday that it would be announcing a new outbreak of the disease and that the stock markets were disappointed. Milan, Paris, and Madrid recorded their worst plunges at the close, London and Frankfurt the worst in more than 30 years.

     On Wall Street, the main indices continued to plummet.

     On Friday morning, the Asian stock markets continued their downward slide: in Tokyo, the Nikkei index fell by more than 10%, while the Chinese stock markets also opened sharply lower (-7% in Hong Kong).

     The impact of the epidemic on the global economy remains "difficult to predict" and will depend on the scale of the pandemic and the responses of affected countries, the IMF said on Thursday, adding that global growth in 2020 would be lower than in 2019.


     The ECB notes a "considerable worsening of short-term growth prospects" in the eurozone, warned its president, Christine Lagarde.

     After the massive aid already announced by the world's major financial institutions, the ECB on Thursday unveiled an arsenal of measures aimed at stemming the financial panic and limiting the economic impact of the pandemic, combining loans to banks - so that they can help companies avoid a wave of bankruptcies - and the purchase of public and above all private debts.

     On the other hand, it has not touched its key rates, a status quo that has accelerated the collapse of the equity markets.

Dispersed order 

Coronavirus_Psychosis

     The EU will already examine the economic impact of the US decision the day before to ban travelers from 26 European countries from entering the United States - which has 1,100 cases - from Saturday for at least 30 days.

     This will have a "strong impact" on the economy, conceded President Donald Trump, about his surprise measure, which has led many Americans, worried about being blocked in Europe, to rush to the airports in Paris, London or Amsterdam, shortening holidays or business trips.

     For the director-general of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), Alexandre de Juniac, the shock caused by this crisis to his sector is "extremely brutal". 


     But two European countries took similar decisions on Thursday: Slovakia has announced the closure of its borders to all foreigners except Poles, and the neighboring Czech Republic has banned travelers from 15 countries. 

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     In the world, 131,460 cases have been recorded in 116 countries and territories, causing the death of 4,923 people, according to a report compiled by AFP from official sources on Thursday at 17:00 GMT.

     The head of the World Health Organisation Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus tried to reassure by saying that the pandemic was "manageable".

     In Italy, which now has more than 15,000 cases, including more than 1,000 deaths, all businesses, except those deemed essential, are now closed.

     These measures have left the Italians perplexed, struggling to judge which ones were essential. 

     On Thursday, for example, it was impossible to find a laundromat open, even though it was exempt from closure.

     In Spain, the number of cases jumped to almost 3,000 - including one minister - and the number of deaths almost doubled to 84. 

     Schools in the Madrid region have been closed. The entire government was being tested for coronavirus.

     The pandemic also continues to wreak havoc on the sporting calendar: NBA basketball matches suspended "for at least a month" according to its boss Adam Silver, the Australian Formula 1 Grand Prix canceled, the Italian football championship suspended until April 3, and the Spanish championship suspended for the next two days.

     The English championship, the richest in the world, is also faltering: Arsenal coach Mikel Arteta (Spain) has tested positive for the coronavirus, as has a first player, the young Englishman Callum Hudson-Odoi (Chelsea). 

     An emergency meeting will be held on Friday morning to decide on the rest of the Premier League season.

     The Olympic flame for the Tokyo Olympics was lit on Thursday at the ancient Greek site of Olympia in a shortened ceremony and in the absence of spectators, so the opportunity to keep the games going is debated.


     And the European football championship, scheduled to take place in 12 countries from 12 June to 12 July, is also increasingly under threat.