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COVID-19 Mutation – What Does it Mean?

Scientist examines Plaque Assay

Just like the flu, every virus mutates in its life cycle. This mutation doesn’t seem to be more aggressive, and a new vaccine could protect against the original strain and close mutations.

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Science Insider: Genetic mutations aren’t as scary as they sound. With RNA viruses, like the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) that causes COVID-19, they’re happening constantly — basically every time it replicates. But not all mutations stick, and not all the ones that stick are bad. In fact, mutations are actually necessary for tracking and containing COVID-19. Here’s how viruses mutate and why you shouldn’t be worried when you hear about them.
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