Extracts from ABC:
There's been talk in PNG that black people are immune
As told by Papua New Guinea correspondent Natalie Whiting
Who is saying this? It appears to have started in the United States but is also being spread on social media in PNG.
What exactly are they saying? The most common myth that has been raised with me, and one I've seen shared widely on social media, is that black people can't get coronavirus.
When the virus first started making headlines, I was asked about this rumoured immunity by a few people in PNG. Some posts on social media here were claiming there was a link between the virus and melanin levels.
How widespread is this? Now that the virus has spread further and there have been cases recorded in the Pacific, there have been more people trying to debunk this myth on social media.
This is what the experts told us:
"That's crackers."
According to Professor Oliver, the theory makes "absolutely no sense".
"Whatever pigmentation you have is of no interest to the virus because it doesn't impact the skin," he said.
"It would perhaps play a role if the virus infected the skin. But in this case, it doesn't so I'm not sure where people are getting this idea from."
Professor Purcell says: "The virus doesn't replicate in skin."
"It targets cells where there is no melanin, in the lungs and gastrointestinal tract, and there are no difference in melanin levels in those tissues," he said.
"Nobody is immune."
30,000 Hindus gathered in Penang for a religious festival. Nobody got COV19.
ReplyDelete15,000 gathered in Seri Petaling, after they dispersed clusters began popping up everywhere.
Cud be there was no carrier during the Hindu gathering as opposed to the Tabligh event where they spent 3 days in close contact, eating, sleeping, praying.
DeleteAnd how long was the Hindu gathering?