Ex-GZSZ star Nina Bott: don't panic in front of Corona – but, …

Nina Bott, 42, is currently calm. Not easy when you are confronted with annoying news about the spread of the coronavirus every minute.

The ex-GZSZ actress is a mother of three. In addition to the 16-year-old son Lennox, she also has the four-year-old Luna and the one-year-old Lio. As you know, worries about children never end. In times of a threatening pandemic, however, they can get out of hand. Are you a little with Nina, too, she admits. She recently took her little one out of the daycare, because the risk of infection seemed too high for her, she justified the step on her Instagram channel at that time.

Nina Bott: More afraid for grandparents than for the children

However, her research on the virus has somewhat alleviated her concerns about the children. "According to my booth, toddlers should get along with Corona quite well," the 42-year-old told "Bunte.de".

There is also preliminary confirmation from the Robert Koch Institute: "According to the WHO, the disease appears to be comparatively rare in children and then to be mild," according to the first findings after observing the course of the disease in the country of origin of the pandemic, China. "However, it is not possible to determine what role children and adolescents play in transmissions and whether they are generally less susceptible to the virus using the data available to date," the Federal Institute's website continued on behalf of the Federal Ministry of Health.

"The grandparents are more worrying for me," reveals the Hamburg woman. Reasoned: Older people belong to the risk group, "with a constantly increasing risk for severe course from about 50-60 years", as the Robert Koch Institute informs.

Scaremongering in the children's playground

Meanwhile, Nina's children go back to daycare. But not all parents are as relaxed as she is, the ex-moderator ("Prominent") knows from her everyday life: "I have to say what is currently going on in playgrounds is really not nice. Many parents think theirs Having to shield children "inconspicuously" and quickly jostle in between when their children come too close to other children or defend their own shovels so that they just don't touch a stranger. " Nina's advice: "Then you should probably stay at home".

… and explain to the children what it is all about with this virus: "You have to understand why we wash our hands more often than usual and also disinfect them every now and then."

Source used: Bunte, Robert Koch Institute, Instagram

This article originally appeared on Gala.de.