

We have shipped supplies of personal protective equipment to 57 countries, we’re preparing to ship to a further 28, and we’ve shipped lab supplies to 120 countries. WHO is working day and night to support all countries. We’re all learning and we must all find new ways to prevent infections, save lives, and minimize impact. Even if you cannot stop transmission, you can slow it down and protect health facilities, old age homes and other vital areas – but only if you test all suspected cases. That means finding and isolating as many cases as possible, and quarantining their closest contacts. To save lives we must reduce transmission. That means robust surveillance to find, isolate, test and treat every case, to break the chains of transmission. You can’t fight a virus if you don’t know where it is. Prepare your people and your health facilities. You have an opportunity to keep it that way. There are still 77 countries and territories with no reported cases, and 55 countries and territories that have reported 10 cases or less.Īnd all countries with cases have unaffected areas. We are calling on countries to take a four-pronged strategy: We urge all countries to take a comprehensive approach tailored to their circumstances – with containment as the central pillar. Countries that decide to give up on fundamental public health measures may end up with a larger problem, and a heavier burden on the health system that requires more severe measures to control.Īll countries must strike a fine balance between protecting health, preventing economic and social disruption, and respecting human rights. The idea that countries should shift from containment to mitigation is wrong and dangerous. Let me be clear: describing this as a pandemic does not mean that countries should give up.

The second reason is that despite our frequent warnings, we are deeply concerned that some countries are not approaching this threat with the level of political commitment needed to control it. In the past two weeks, the number of cases reported outside China has increased almost 13-fold, and the number of affected countries has almost tripled. We have made this assessment for two main reasons: first, because of the speed and scale of transmission.Īlmost 125,000 cases have now been reported to WHO, from 118 countries and territories. It's good to change to a neutral mission, like Atlas Mission and switch back to the reset mission to trigger it correctly for the start.Excellencies, dear colleagues and friends,įirst of all, I would like to say good morning.Īs you know, yesterday I said that the global COVID-19 outbreak can now be described as a pandemic. Be sure to make a separate BACKUP of your save before you start tinkering with the Editor for these steps, if you get it wrong you can then simply try again, Editor will make backps however.Īfter changing progress value you must check that both CurrentMissionID and PreviousMissionID both have logical values, or the results may not show-up correctly, also after reloading the save it takes some time for the game to sort-out the correct mission display. It's important that the previous mission of the one you are resetting also shows to be correctly terminated (PreviousMissionID). Lowering the current number in 'progress' is comming back to the last step of the mission ready for replaying it, increasing the number should skip that mission part. You reset the mission by setting "progress" to -1 which will tell the game that this mission has never been started.
#MASS EFFECT 3 SAVE EDITOR RESTART MISSION CODE#
Then you must search this code name in one of the number categories of the missions, here you can enable-disable it.

This will give you the code name of the mission. how to completely reset a mission which will then be in the status of "Mission never done".įirst, in-game you need to activate the mission in your log that you want to reset, autosave the game, and go look under "CurrentMissionID" in JSON category. Resetting a mission is not quite that simple, there are more than just the progress values to change.
