A number of epidemiologists have said that enclosed spaces are the ideal environment for influenza viruses to thrive, cold and contract the Corona virus.

According to the information known about the kurna virus, the fresh air is one of its main enemies.

Despite the truth that Corona can be spread at any time, the probability that it will spread in the summer is less, because people are less likely to catch a cold .

There has always been a lot of speculation about whether warm weather affects the transmission of the Coronavirus, but no final conclusions have been reached, and even an outbreak in many tropical countries has not been conclusive evidence for this. According to health experts, the outdoors, not warm weather, may play a more important role in slowing the infection this summer.

"The old example that says windows must be opened in order to enter the air is the best way to fight the virus," said epidemiologist Anthony Traella, one of the committee that advises the Spanish government in dealing with the Corona pandemic. The molecules that carry the virus are stationary in the air, concentrated, and can be easily inhaled. "If we maintain a physical distance between each other in the open air, the probability of infection is perhaps very, very low ."

Some people may see that leaving the house is what makes the person sick. But perhaps his bad luck caused him to pass through a street with an infected person, and thus breathe the mist caused by his cough. This remains a low possibility.

But it is certain that the possibility of transmission of the infection rises when we are in contact with an infected person and how close he is to us, and the possibility of infection depends on the amount of viruses that we inhaled from him.

Studies of the sites where the disease was prevalent indicate that most of them were closed places.

Researcher Gwen Knight of the Mathematical Profiling Center for Infectious Diseases in the United Kingdom compared several different scientific studies as well as different types of other publications on the subject itself.

And Gwen’s study revealed that of the 188 studies that dealt with the outbreak of the disease, only seven (3.7%) of these activities occurred in open air areas .

Spanish public health services spokesman Alfonso Hernandez said that all studies published on this subject revealed that outbreaks of the disease started in closed places, such as homes, offices, restaurants, warehouses, religious temples, hospitals, and hotels.

"Outdoors, the virus can spread, but in a much smaller amount than in enclosed spaces," Hernandez added.

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