Here we will use the end of the pandemic, when the daily mortality rate falls to 0.3 million, as an indicator of an end to pandemics in the individual states. [Sources: 1] 
    
The forecasting programme estimates that the global dissemination of COVID-19 will end by December 2020. Because the virus is so clearly present and widespread here, only a very effective vaccine can bring the pandemic fully under control. While the development of such a vaccine is likely to take at least 12 to 18 months, the state will take other measures to reopen society. But even if all the masks are worn, the United States will not function again without vaccines until vaccines are available. [Sources: 1, 3] 
    
Cultural and religious fear will continue to hamper the vaccine's development and implementation in the United States and other parts of Europe. [Sources: 3] 
    
We will know whether efforts to end the pandemic have been successful if tests and contact tracing programmes can show a sustained and substantial reduction in incidence and mortality rates reach historic control levels. [Sources: 3] 
    
The latter factor has to do with seasonal changes, and it is not yet known whether the virus that causes COVID-19 will slow down due to higher temperatures, CDC officials say. Unfortunately, experts currently believe that rising temperatures will not have a significant impact on slowing the spread of CO VID-19. Experts from the National Academy of Sciences say the summer weather will make no difference, as most countries are not immune to the disease at all. [Sources: 2] 
    
In countries with warmer climates, the experts add, infection rates are still high, and available research may suggest that SARS and CoV-2 could live longer than they would normally. It will not be known whether states that have already reopened will reintroduce social isolation and stay home until medical experts report how many have been diagnosed by the COVID-19 case count in the coming weeks. While some states and cities in metropolitan areas have days when no new cases are reported by doctors, Beric Stojsic said he did not expect the social precautions to stop. [Sources: 2] 
    
But some states have not yet taken the first step toward resuming something of a routine, such as New York City and Washington, D.C. [Sources: 2] 
    
As Aaron E. Carroll and Ashish Jha recently wrote, schools and businesses should keep their doors open when repression fails and those infected have been identified and isolated. There is no reason for the US to allow the virus to spread to other parts of the world, such as the Middle East or Africa, or for social distancing measures, such as health care and education, to be implemented as they are now. For now, we must prepare for the worst-case scenario: the outbreak of a new strain of Ebola in the United States. [Sources: 6] 
    
As herd immunity increases, it will become increasingly difficult for the virus to spread explosively, especially given its long-awaited arrival in the United States. It could follow the path of the virus of 1918 by evolving into a widespread seasonal flu that is now protected from previous infections by flu vaccinations and antibodies for many people. It may be necessary to update the vaccine when viruses change, and people may need to be re-vaccinated, as we are currently doing, or the vaccine itself. [Sources: 0, 6] 
    
How long control measures, such as social detachment, must remain in place depends in large part on how rigorously people adhere to these constraints, and how effectively the government responds. How COVID-19 will impact is speculative, but the end game will most likely be to review everything for past pandemics, to continue social control, to buy time, and to use new antiviral drugs to relieve symptoms. The mitigation measures that work in CO VID-19 will take the form of a combination of social and medical controls and new vaccines. [Sources: 0] 
    
A new coronavirus has spread rapidly across the globe and emerged in the United States, turning it into a global pandemic. There have been more than 1,000 confirmed positive cases of the virus worldwide and at least 2,500 confirmed positive cases, according to reports on May 17. [Sources: 5] 
    
Many states continue to push for social distancing and promote a policy of self-isolation, while others have already begun to reopen businesses. [Sources: 5] 
    
When bars reopen, as they do in US cities and places around the world, they will do so in large numbers, and if social dissociation exists for a reason, it is to slow down the number of people who come into close contact with them. If a persistent coronavirus in an asymptomatic host is given the opportunity to infect others who could then pass it on, then a party at home or the crush in a bar at the reopening will bring people together and give them the chance to be infected by others, some of whom could then pass their virus on to others. [Sources: 4] 
    





Sources:
    
[0]: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-the-covid-19-pandemic-could-end1/
    
[1]: https://www.talktomira.com/post/when-will-coronavirus-peak-and-end-social-distancing
    
[2]: https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/health/a31997509/when-will-coronavirus-social-distancing-end/
    
[3]: https://www.healio.com/news/infectious-disease/20200522/how-will-the-covid19-pandemic-end
    
[4]: https://www.cnet.com/health/7-things-to-not-do-when-coronavirus-lockdown-and-quarantine-end/
    
[5]: https://www.womenshealthmag.com/health/a31406983/when-will-coronavirus-end/
    
[6]: https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/03/how-will-coronavirus-end/608719/