This necessarily means that you should avoid frozen bloodless turkey foods, but apparently, China’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have detected and removed live Covid-19 coronavirus from the outer packaging of imported frozen cod while They were looking for an outbreak in Qingdao, China.
According to China’s official Xinhua news agency, China’s CDC said it “has shown that contact with containers infected with a new live coronavirus can lead to infection. “Note that the Chinese CDC also stated that “the threat that bloodless chain foods circulating in the Chinese market will become infected with the new coronavirus is very low,” according to Xinhua’s report. To date, 22 of the 670,000 food samples or food containers in the bloodless chain have tested positive for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS-CoV2) coronavirus 2.
Here is a CGTN on the results:
The following tweet from the CDC’s Chinese announcement:
Take those effects with a full dinner of salt. The report did not involve any peer-reviewed clinical publication showing the knowledge or precise manner in which the tests were performed. Finding a live virus does not verify that a user has pasted the Covid-19 coronavirus from the frozen container itself.
However, this does not deserve to be a surprising revelation of the point “Luke, I am your father”. Studies have shown that living in SARS-CoV2 can remain on surfaces for an era of moderate time (or not moderate depending on your point of view). For example, as I covered for Forbes, a recent study published in the Virology Journal found that SARS-CoV2 may be on non-unusual surfaces such as glass, stainless metal and silver for up to 28 days, which would be enough time for Kate Hudson’s character in the film “How to Lose a Man in 10 Days” to lose 3 men. The study also reported that the virus may last longer at cooler temperatures.
The US CDC has not been able to do that. But it’s not the first time They kept on their online page that “respiratory drops can also fall on surfaces and objects. “For example, if an inflamed user and excreting SARS-CoV2 took a can of pre-frozen waffles, they can also simply put the virus in the box. (Note: You actually have to wait until the waffles are ready before gasping them. )Similarly, if a contagious user touched his face and then stroked the box gently repeating, “soon you’ll be mine, you’ll soon be mine,” the box may also be contaminated. The U. S. CDC’s online page has been a member of the U. S. The U. S. went on to say, “A user may contract COVID-19 by touching a surface or object containing the virus and then touching their own mouth, nose, or eyes. “
So what do those effects mean to you? Well, this is additional evidence that you don’t rub your face with bags of frozen food. If you are going to make a palm of your face, be sure to drop this frozen bird first. Frozen pea bags are not yet smart pillows. , keep your eyes, nose and mouth away from frozen foods and frozen food packages, no matter how hungry you are. And if your friends are blown away by their frozen foods, it’s a smart concept for a number of reasons to tell them to stop.
Be sure to wash your hands very well after handling frozen foods and their containers. To make sure you soap your hands are soapy for at least 20 seconds, sing Divinyls’ song “I Touch Myself” until at least the end of the first chorus where it happens, “oh no, oh no, oh no”, and update the word “myself” with the word “peas”. Wash your hands as soon as you can imagine before touching yourself or someone else. So, right after unpacking the frozen foods, don’t move on to your other significant one and don’t say “you complement me” by rubbing your potentially infected paw all over your face. First, its other significant will have to “value you” and not “complement you”. Second, smearing anything on his face probably won’t make you earn brownie points, even if you were driving frozen brownies. And third, unless you’re already in a social bubble with the person, keep your distance. Keep at least one Denzel or six feet (Denzel Washington is about six feet) from each other.
If there is an apparent contamination imaginable, such as someone coughing in their frozen sausages, you may want to clean the packaging and everything that has affected its packaging. It cannot damage the food packaging, as long as what you use does not leak. in or in food. However, the World Health Organization (WHO) online page states that “there is no desire to disinfect food packaging. “
In fact, the chances of contracting Covid-19 coronavirus from food containers still appear to be low. Remember that SARS-CoV2 is not like members of the One Direction music organization. One or some viruses are not enough to cause agitation. there has to be enough virus living around (an infectious dose) to cause an infection. This infectious dose also deserves to be able to stay in the packaging long enough.
However, it is an intelligent concept to use the usual protective precautions when handling frozen foods and their packaging. After all, covid-19 coronavirus is rarely the only thing to worry about in those days. It’s not as if other pathogens like Salmonella are socially estating the pandemic. They can still be in food and food packaging and affect their health in other ways. And this speaks of turkey, as well as many other frozen foods.
Full policy and updates on the coronavirus
I am a writer, journalist, professor, system modeler, expert in virtual and PC fitness, law room and entrepreneur, not in that order.
I’m a writer, journalist, teacher, systems modeler, computer science and virtual fitness expert, avocado eater, and entrepreneur – not all the time in that order. Currently, I am a Professor of Health Policy and Management at the City University of New York (CUNY) School of Public Health, Executive Director of PHICOR (@PHICORteam), Courtesy Professor at Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, and Founder and CEO by Symsilico. My previous positions were Executive Director of the Global Obesity Prevention Center (GOPC) at Johns Hopkins University, Associate Professor of International Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Associate Professor of Medicine and Biomedical Informatics at the University of Pittsburgh, and Senior Manager at Quintiles Transnational, pursuing equity studies in biotechnology at Securities and co-founder of a biotechnology / bioinformatics company. My paintings have come with the progression of IT approaches, models, and equipment to assist creators of fitness and fitness resolution on every continent (except Antarctica) and have been supported by a wide variety of sponsors such as the Foundation Bill and Melinda Gates, NIH, AHRQ, CDC, UNICEF, USAID, and the Global Fund. I have written over two hundred clinical publications and 3 books. Follow me on Twitter (@bruce_y_lee) but don’t ask me if I know martial arts.