Coronavirus: WHO officials say it’s “unclear” whether immunity to second covid-19 infection is possible

Published by Caroline de Sortiraparis · Published on April 15th, 2020 at 12:54 p.m.
Once tested positive for Covid-19, then recovered, is it possible to be infected again? This is the main issue to handle the health crisis, but which answer remains “unclear” the World Health Organization said.

While some European countries are setting up deconfinement strategies, scientists keep on working hard to know more about Covid-19 and try and find factors of immunity to this virus.

As a matter of fact, many questions remain without an answer: after being infected once by coronavirus, then completely recovered, are we totally immune? If so, for how long? As of today, the WHO – World Health Organization – isn’t sure people infected by Covid-19 developed antibodies and are then totally immune to the virus.

With regards to recovery and then reinfection, I believe we do not have the answers to that. That is an unknown,” Dr. Mike Ryan, executive director of WHO’s emergencies program, said at a press conference this April 13th

"One would expect that a person who generates a full-blown immune response with detectable antibodies should have protection for a period of time," Ryan said. "We just don't know what that period of time is. We would expect that to be a reasonable period of protection, but it is very difficult to say that with a new virus."

As of today, immunity to coronavirus still relies on numerous questions and the WHO doesn’t guaranteed people who already have had Covid-19 then cured cannot be infected again. There’s also the question about developing antibodies. By the way, Germany launched, a few days ago, a gigantic study about immunity to covid-19.

Interviewed this April 12th by Franceinfo, Eric Vivier from the Immunology Center Marseille-Luminy and member of the Academy of Medicine said: “we generally see those sero-neutralizing antibodies appear within two to three weeks, but we may have to wait for longer sometimes”.

On Monday April 13, South Korea Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-Wha acknowledged patients who have had Covid-19 and considered “completely recovered” have been “tested positive again a few days later”.

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