Inside The DHS Lab Where Researchers Study The Covid-19 Coronavirus



NBC: Inside the secret DHS lab testing how long coronavirus can survive on shopping carts and in sunlight

The scientists have been working 15 hours a day, seven days a week trying to crack the COVID-19 code.

For scientists working at the Department of Homeland Security’s biodefense research laboratory, the directive from senior agency officials was unprecedented: drop everything and focus on one target, the coronavirus.

As the number of positive cases in the United States tops 1.2 million and deaths exceed 70,000, those scientists have been working 15 hours a day, seven days a week trying to crack the COVID-19 code.

“This is the most urgent thing we have worked on since 9/11,” said Lloyd Hough, a senior official and biology expert with Homeland Security's Science and Technology Directorate.

The National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center, or NBACC, was created and built by the department as a federal response to anthrax letter attacks in 2001.

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WNU Editor: The above article and video gives a brief summary on what is our current understanding on what environments are not healthy for the Covid-19 coronavirus. Apparently this virus hates the sunlight.

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