Can We Still Beat the Coronavirus?
The World Health Organisation (WHO) dropped a truth bomb on Monday: the virus is still beatable. Even as cases climb, the leaders believe it’s premature to call it a pandemic, hoping to calm nerves and keep hope alive.
What WHO’s Director-General Had to Say
- “It’s a hoax to label it a pandemic right now—it just feeds fear.”
- “We’ve already seen many countries knockout the spread successfully.”
- “Let’s keep our focus on containment and stay ready for a possible big‑bang.”
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also sounded the alarm about sudden spikes in Italy, Iran and South Korea: “Deeply concerning.” Yet, he emphasised that a global, uncontained outbreak had not yet materialised.
Key Takeaways
- WHO declared a public health emergency of international concern last month.
- COVID‑19 has pandemic potential, but it’s not here yet.
- China is easing restrictions as new cases drop.
- Some countries are still at risk if severe cases get skewed.
- Past pandemics (like 2009 H1N1) taught us to be cautious before declaring war.
Numbers That Matter
China: 77,362 cases, 2,618 deaths.
Outside China: 2,074 cases across 28 countries, 23 deaths.
Why the WHO Keeps the Pandemic Flag Lower
- Helps weaker health systems shore up defenses before it’s too late.
- Prevents panic-driven decisions that could scramble markets.
- Gives a realistic timeline for vaccine and treatment roll‑outs.
It’s a reminder: “Fight like it’s a headline, not a headline scream.” Keep your gloves, masks, and optimism stocked—together we can pull this one out!
