Science paper: CCP virus outbreak as early as October 2019

As countries around the world begin vaccination programs against the Chinese communist virus, scientists continue to persist in their quest to discover the origins of the disaster. An article in the journal Science analyzes the timing of the initial infections and the causes of the massive spread of the virus, suggesting that the outbreak would likely not have occurred if a key factor had been missing.

The American journal Science recently published a research report that attempts to provide an explanation for the origin of the CCP virus Epidemic.

It is understood that the research team used molecular dating to calculate the Time of existence of the virus through its continuous mutation rate, and also used computer models to simulate when and how the virus spread.

The virus first appeared in October

The CNN report cites article co-author Joel Wertheim, an associate professor in the Department of Infectious Diseases and Global Public health at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, as saying that the researchers combined three important pieces of information, including the spread of the outbreak in Wuhan before the city was closed, the genetic diversity of the virus in China, and the earliest reported cases of CCP pneumonia in China. inferred that the CCP virus outbreak began spreading in Hubei Province as early as mid-October 2019.

The study does not reveal which animal carried the virus, but confirms that the virus could not have emerged from outside China or before October, while denying claims that the virus entered European countries before then.

Timing and location?

Michael Worobey, a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Arizona who worked on the report, explained that the new coronavirus is believed to have spread among a very small number of people between October and December, before entering the seafood market in southern China and beginning to spread rapidly.

He described the CCP virus outbreak as a “perfect storm” that might not have resulted in “early superspread” if “patient zero” had not or could not have gone to the South China seafood market. The outbreak was a “perfect storm.

Wuhan Virus Institute staff illnesses linked to the outbreak?

It is worth noting that the timing of the virus’ emergence from this study roughly coincides with the timing suspected by the previous U.S. government.

The U.S. State Department released a report on the activities of the Wuhan Virus Institute in January of this year, when the WHO flew to Wuhan to investigate the origins of the CCP virus, in which it stated that “the U.S. government has reason to believe that multiple researchers within the Wuhan Virus Institute became ill in the fall of 2019” and that “symptoms consistent with CCP pneumonia and common seasonal diseases” and also “prior to the emergence of the first confirmed cases,” highlighting the condition as an element to further examine the origin of the outbreak.

Although the WHO panel acknowledged the news, it concluded that the researchers were simply suffering from a common influenza and that it was “highly unlikely” that the virus had been accidentally leaked from the laboratory. Such a conclusion was criticized by former U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State David Feith, who questioned why the WHO panel did not investigate the situation and include in its report information on the number of people who had been sick, whether they had received visits, whether their medical records were available and whether they had been tested for antibodies.