WHO, 코로나19 무증상자 전염 '아주 희귀'하다는 발언 하루만에 번복
— Wan Ki Choi (@wkchoi) June 9, 2020
- 이는 많은 전문가들이 온라인에서 무증상자 전염 사례의 몇 가지 연구와 모델링으로 문제 지적한 후 취한 조치
- WHO, 무증상자 전염이 아주 희귀하다고 말한 것 유감이라고 말해 https://t.co/bJBkYzSzIe
WHO walks back comments on asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus, estimates 16% of people are asymptomatic and can transmit the virus. https://t.co/V1cjjP98UQ
— Molly Beck (@MollyBeck) June 9, 2020
The WHO clarified comments an official made yesterday calling asymptomatic transmission of the coronavirus "very rare," saying that these carriers do take part in spreading the virus but that more information is needed to know by how much.https://t.co/WD2r13CLZn
— Axios (@axios) June 9, 2020
The WHO is ALREADY reversing course on their awful decision to call the asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus "very rare".
— DoctorJohn (@DoctorJohn_MD) June 9, 2020
The damage is likely already done; this will only further fuel dismissal of the pandemic that is very much still happening.https://t.co/ZFwkn0uMYB
WHO walks back comments on asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus https://t.co/L7i9WTIqte
— Joe Bruno (@JoeBrunoWSOC9) June 9, 2020
From the fulsome praise of China despite its coronavirus cover-ups, to the panic it created when it made it sound like there's definitely no immunity to people who get infected, to latest confusion on asymptomatic carriers. The @WHO keeps racking it up.https://t.co/TMH8paeKA8
— Issam Ahmed (@IssamAhmed) June 9, 2020
For those who saw this CNBC story yesterday, where the WHO said asymptomatic transmission of the coronavirus is rare, the WHO has now walked that back. https://t.co/LrPgTYW2Jr https://t.co/IQMm31vRaV
— Travis Fain (@TravisFain) June 9, 2020
The WHO corrected itself already. Their statements weren't accurate. https://t.co/m2hCBlGZid
— Hold2 (@Hold2LLC) June 9, 2020
That is NOT what the WHO said. They said it is rare and not the primary method of transmission. They've already walked this back: https://t.co/irkZdfKtMr
— Steve Matlick (@SteveMatlick) June 9, 2020
HELLO! WHO walks back comments calling asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus "very rare" https://t.co/j37cqSUMix
— David Aronoff (@DMAronoff) June 9, 2020
It seems WHO can't communicate to save their life, the media can't help exploding the internet with a headline, and we can't help but eat it all up and post it to facebook five minutes later.https://t.co/GLcwARyzzY
— Joshua Torrey (@JoshuaTorrey) June 9, 2020
Important clarification of yesterday's WHO comments. WHO walks back comments calling asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus "very rare" https://t.co/uIL72LkW0E
— Greta Kaul (@gretakaul) June 9, 2020
Tell us about it: WHO walks back comments on asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus https://t.co/fPWqHAxzm5
— Lorrie Goldstein (@sunlorrie) June 9, 2020
Are asymptomatic people spreading the coronavirus? A WHO official’s words spark confusion, debate. Bottom line: yes, someone with NO symptoms CAN spread it. @thewanreport @MiriamABerger
— LenaSun (@bylenasun) June 9, 2020
https://t.co/EchazWKoMo
A comment by a WHO official on Monday — calling such asymptomatic transmissions “very rare” — attracted widespread criticism of the organization. Less than 24 hours later, WHO convened a special news conference to walk back its comments. https://t.co/L9ZehAkCsy
— William Wan (@thewanreport) June 9, 2020
BUT OF COURSE??
— Bella Dottore ? (@GeenaJagger) June 9, 2020
#WHO says earlier statement calling asymptomatic transmission of #WuhanVirus ‘very rare’ was a ‘misunderstanding’https://t.co/wE8AEfCeKj
Are asymptomatic people spreading the coronavirus? A WHO official’s words sparks confusion, debate. @WHO tries to clarify what Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove said yesterday during a press conference that leg to significant discussion in #SoMe https://t.co/XfEJuOCZvC
— Carlos del Rio (@CarlosdelRio7) June 9, 2020
On top of fear, confusion, propaganda and lies, the public also has to contend with confusing statements from global officials:
— Hamza Shaban (@hshaban) June 9, 2020
The WHO says earlier statement calling asymptomatic transmission of coronavirus "very rare" was a "misunderstanding."https://t.co/cNPW63QHZ1
When it's accurate to use the term "unknown"
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) June 9, 2020
A good recap of the @WHO controversy on asymptomatic transmission of #SARSCoV2 https://t.co/0JGXgxwQyj by @thewanreport and @MiriamABerger pic.twitter.com/tKBqXMuiGi
“The World Health Organization moved Tuesday to clarify its position on whether people without symptoms are widely spreading the new coronavirus, saying much remains unknown about asymptomatic transmission.” https://t.co/7eDDtVLvqY
— Joe Scarborough (@JoeNBC) June 9, 2020
Science is moving just about as fast as it ever has to figure out coronavirus, there are bound to be things we learn that revise previous conclusions.
— Tal Kopan (@TalKopan) June 9, 2020
But science communicators have to not make own goals along the way that undermine trust. https://t.co/KX4hoYDOcv
In statement to @bylenasun , CDC stressed it remains essential people wear masks, despite recent confusion over WHO statement on asymptomatic transmission https://t.co/L9ZehA31B0
— William Wan (@thewanreport) June 9, 2020
“I don’t know why they would say asymptomatic transmission is very rare when we simply don’t know how frequent it is," said Dr. Eric Topol. “And it doesn’t change the facts we do know, which is this virus is very transmissible & is very hard to combat.” https://t.co/JDudHmnfqD
— GoldenRule1 (@cooperchip1) June 9, 2020
WHO, Monday: It's "very rare" for asymptomatic people to spread the virus
— Gregg Carlstrom (@glcarlstrom) June 10, 2020
WHO, Tuesday: Actually 16% of them might spread it, and they might cause 40% of cases, we don't really know
Amazing how consistently bad this organization is at communicating https://t.co/bYsVmvAKfA
yesterday, the WHO once more clowned themselves on COV by claiming it was not spread by asymptomatic carriers
— el gato malo (@boriquagato) June 9, 2020
nearly all viruses shed and are contagious while asymptomatic
for a respiratory virus not to be contagious during this stage would be unique. https://t.co/LWSnQOo1AE
This news about the WHO coming under fire from the Left for stating that #COVID19 transmissions by asymptomatic people were "very rare", shows the strong desire of some to keep the public alarm high: https://t.co/qmJTSGSPSq
— Ned Nikolov, Ph.D. (@NikolovScience) June 10, 2020
There is no evidence for CV spread by asymptotic people!
A comment by a WHO official on Monday — calling such asymptomatic transmissions “very rare” — touched off a furious scientific debate over the unresolved question and attracted widespread criticism of the organization. https://t.co/1PKvowfErQ
— Ariana Eunjung Cha (@arianaeunjung) June 9, 2020
Less than 24 hours later, WHO convened a special news conference to walk back its comments, stressing that much remains unknown. https://t.co/t1h6ZMzcd4
— Ben Pershing (@benpershing) June 9, 2020
With all the confusion about asymptomatic vs presymptomatic transmission, we cannot overstate what is known. https://t.co/QwRRbQ45lZ
— Jennifer Nuzzo, DrPH (@JenniferNuzzo) June 9, 2020
The article states “While asymptomatic transmission does occur no one knows for sure how frequently it happens..& it remains an open question whether they’re a large force driving transmission.” If that’s true, why so much hype? More political shenanigans? https://t.co/Yd1asKOcRX
— Peter Daszak (@PeterDaszak) June 9, 2020
無症状者から感染するケースは希というWHOのコメントを撤回。未知な部分がだいぶあるとのこと。残念。 -- Are asymptomatic people spreading the coronavirus? A WHO official’s words spark confusion, debate https://t.co/T1tJ4iGqsO
— 大石雅寿(手洗い&うがいで風邪知らず) (@mo0210) June 9, 2020
The power of Restricted Republic! The World Health Organization attempts to walk back their 'Rare ASYMPTOMATIC Spread' of #COVID19 statement! Complete video on our platform, an absolute must see!
— Restricted Republic (@RestrictedRepu1) June 9, 2020
https://t.co/m11MzEOGQA
JOIN NOW AT: https://t.co/pBoGMzMOw4!
La incompetencia de esta gente es a otro nivel. No se les puede tomar en serio. “Maria Van Kerkhove, head of the WHO’s emerging disease and zoonosis unit, called the controversy over asymptomatic transmission of the coronavirus “a misunderstanding." https://t.co/LaHVn4Mh0U
— Carmina Valdizán (@CValdizan) June 9, 2020