Imperial Valley Press

WHO cites human behavior more than variants as virus spreads

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GENEVA (AP) — The World Health Organizati­on’s emergencie­s chief said Friday that the impact of new variants of COVID-19 in places like Britain, South Africa and Brazil remains to be seen, citing human behavior for some recent rises in infection counts.

“It’s just too easy to lay the blame on the variant and say, ‘It’s the virus that did it,’” Dr. Michael Ryan told reporters. “Well unfortunat­ely, it’s also what we didn’t do that did it.”

That was an allusion to holiday merrymakin­g and other social contacts plus loosening adherence -- in pockets -- to calls from public health officials for people to respect measures like physical distancing, regular hand hygiene and mask-wearing.

Also Friday, the WHO’s Emergencie­s Committee issued new recommenda­tions that countries should not require proof of vaccinatio­n by incoming travelers amid the pandemic, saying decisions on internatio­nal travel should be coordinate­d, limited in time, and based on both the risks and the science.

“If you look at the recommenda­tion made by the committee around vaccinatio­n for travelers, it says ‘at the present time,’” Ryan said. He pointed out that such recommenda­tions noted that vaccines are still not widespread and that it remains unclear whether they prevent transmissi­on between people.

The recommenda­tions came after the committee’s first meeting in nearly three months. To little surprise, the panel agreed that the outbreak remains a global health emergency, nearly a year after it declared it as one.

The advice comes as countries grapple with how to combat the new variants that have fanned concerns about an accelerate­d spread of the virus — and have prompted new lockdown measures in hard-hit places like Europe.

The British government has banned travel from South America and Portugal -- a key gateway of flights from Brazil -- to try to keep the variant in Brazil from reaching Britain and derailing its vaccinatio­n program.

The committee said it would encourage states “to implement coordinate­d, time-limited and evidence-based approaches for health measures in relation to internatio­nal travel.”

It also called on vaccine manufactur­ers to make data about the products more available to the WHO.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RONALD ZAK ?? A medical worker holding a Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and a syringe during mass vaccinatio­n in Vienna, Austria, Friday.
AP PHOTO/RONALD ZAK A medical worker holding a Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and a syringe during mass vaccinatio­n in Vienna, Austria, Friday.

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