It seems like everyone has a different take on how COVID-19 came to be. US Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee have questioned the National Institutes of Health on the alleged “lab leak.”
The majority of scientists agree with the conclusion made in a Science Magazine article
The majority of scientists agree with the conclusion made in a Science Magazine article published in August that the virus most likely transferred from animals to humans in the crowded wet markets in Wuhan, China.
Republicans in the US Senate who looked into the virus’s origins speculate that COVID-19 may have originated from a lab leak, but they stress that there isn’t any proof to back this up.
According to Gigi Gronvall, chief researcher and immunologist at The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, the hypothetical lab breach is “not supported by scientific truth.”
The COVID-19 virus may have come from a lab breach: US Senate Republicans
The virus may have come from a lab breach, according to US Senate Republicans who looked into the infection’s origins; however, they emphasize that the findings are preliminary. The report should serve as a roadmap for the World Health Organization (WHO) and other international organizations, according to ranking senator Richard Burr.
Although the study was initially made public by Burr’s team, Senate HELP Chair Patty Murray stated that she was still committed to collaborating with Burr on examining the causes of COVID-19. According to Murray, the bipartisan pandemic readiness legislation (S. 3799) that the HELP Committee approved in March included a detailed investigation of how COVID-19 initially developed.
Murray pointed out that in order to guarantee that a situation like this never happens again and that everyone learns from this pandemic’s lessons, the law recommended the establishment of a different task group to look into the causes of COVID-19.