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              Topics Covered
- What has changed in the understanding of COVID-19 epidemiology
 - Lessons learnt regarding containment, and the implications for future strategies
 - New information regarding immunity and clinical outcomes of the virus
 - Possible future scenarios
 
Biography
Dr. Temte is professor of family medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and chair of the U.S. Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). He has chaired ACIP work groups on MMRV Safety, Evidence-based Recommendations, and MMR Vaccine. He received his BA in biology from Luther College, MS in biological oceanography from Oregon State University, PhD in zoology and MD from the University of Wisconsin. His current area of interest is influenza surveillance in primary care and vaccine policy.
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Talk Citation
Temte, J. (2020, May 27). The COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak: May 2020 update [Audio file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 4, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/DWHC5976.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
- Published on May 27, 2020
 
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Jonathan Temte has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
 
Other Talks in the Playlist: Interviews on Covid-19
Transcript
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                    Interviewer:  Professor Temte,
thank you for
                  
                    doing this interview with us today as
an update to your past interviews on
                  
                    the epidemiology of COVID-19
caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
                  
                    What are some of the changes that have
occurred since your last interview with us
                  
                    at the end of March?
                  
                    Prof. Temte:  Unfortunately we
have seen a steady increase in cases
                  
                    across the world, and
in that we see certain areas
                  
                    having their outbreaks and
getting through them, and
                  
                    other areas in which the numbers
of cases are accelerating rapidly.
                  
                    Across the globe, we now see more
than five million diagnosed cases and
                  
                    about a third of a million deaths so
far, and
                  
                    in my country alone we have over
one-and-a-half million cases and
                  
                    almost 95,000 deaths,
which is an unfortunate
                  
                    tribute to our slowness in
responding to this pandemic.
                  
                    Interviewer:  Has the trajectory of this
virus followed the path that you thought
                  
                    it would since the beginning
of the outbreak?
                  
                    Prof. Temte:  Again,
it's very interesting and
                  
                    one can sit back in one's office and
                  
                    watch the epidemic take
off in real time and
                  
                    monitor it on a daily
basis across the globe.
                  
                    I think the challenge
has been the combination
                  
                    of things that work and
things that don't work,