Men more likely to contract COVID-19 than women, says Expert
The data on novel coronavirus cases accumulated so far shows that men are twice more likely to contract COVID-19 than women, Nikolay Briko, head of the First Moscow State Medical University’s Epidemiology and Evidence-Based Medicine Department and Russian Health Ministry’s chief non-resident epidemiologist, stated on Monday.
“If we look at who contracts the novel coronavirus, men become infected more often than women. Nearly twice as often,” he said during the live transmission of the conference held on the “Future of Russia. National Projects” portal operated by TASS. The causes for this are unknown, he added. “Perhaps, this is a peculiarity of immune response, a feature of male and female resistance,” the expert said.
The specialist stated that he is not aware whether blood type can affect one’s susceptibility to the disease, however, “there are some genetic factors that define predisposition and the way the infection develops.”
He added that this figure might not be final, as it is likely that not all cases of the infection have been documented. “Not everyone is included [in the total number of coronavirus cases], for example, there are mild and invisible types. If they are expanded, the lethality rate will be different. There would be more people infected and the lethality rate will be lower,” he explained.
A pneumonia outbreak caused by the COVID-19 virus (previously known as 2019-nCoV) was reported in China’s city of Wuhan, a large trade and industrial center with a population of 12 million, in late December 2019. Cases of the new coronavirus have also been reported in more than 150 countries and territories, among them Russia, which by now has documented 438 cases. The World Health Organization (WHO) says that the novel coronavirus cases across the globe have exceeded 320,000, with more than 14,000 deaths.
WHO has officially described the situation with the novel coronavirus as a pandemic.
(www.newsnow.co.uk)