Health
Burn, COVID, burn: SARS-CoV-2 immunity still present 6 months after infection, says study – Gulf News
Specific T-cell immunity to virus critical in curbing infections, re-infections

Once confirmed, the study on the longevity of the T cell immune response to SARS-CoV-2 would be critical both in controlling primary infection and preventing re-infection, researchers pointed out.
Image Credit: Jay Hilotin / Gulf News
DUBAI: People who recovered following a moderate or an asymptomatic coronavirus episode could have T-cell immunity for as long as six months. This was borne out of a study that showed patients have kept T-cell immunity against SARS-CoV-2 for up to 180 days after primary…
-
General18 hours ago
Australian celebrity chef Peter Russell-Clarke dies aged 89
-
Noosa News17 hours ago
Woman airlifted to Brisbane hospital after big cat mauling at south-east Queensland zoo near Toowoomba
-
Noosa News17 hours ago
Unvaccinated horse dies from Hendra virus as Queensland records first case in three years
-
General20 hours ago
Back-to-back rate cuts tipped when Reserve Bank meets