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How Dangerous Is The Coronavirus and How Does It Spread - Financial Times PDF
How Dangerous Is The Coronavirus and How Does It Spread - Financial Times PDF
| Financial Times
Coronavirus
How dangerous is the coronavirus and how does it spread?
Scientists race to understand Covid-19 as number of confirmed cases continues to rise
A Chinese worker dressed in a protective suit takes the temperature of a woman at a subway station in Beijing during the lunar new year and spring
festival holiday © Kevin Frayer/Getty
Scientists are racing to understand the coronavirus disease, Covid-19, which is now a
fast-growing global pandemic. The number of confirmed cases worldwide has
exceeded 200,000 — and many epidemiologists believe the real total of infections
may be close to a million because testing and reporting are so incomplete.
Though Covid-19 has passed its peak in China, cases in some western countries are
doubling or tripling every week. Public health experts fear the respiratory illness,
which is believed to have started in a food market in Wuhan, will be at least as bad as
Spanish flu in 1918-19.
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A transmission electron microscopy image of the first isolated case of the coronavirus © Courtesy of IVDC/China CDC via GISAID/Reuters
Covid-19 is transmitted much more readily between humans than its closest relation,
Sars, which caused outbreaks of serious disease in a few countries in 2003. The new
coronavirus is, however, less dangerous to most people it infects than Sars. Computer
modelling suggests that each new Covid-19 case infects 2.5 other people on average
when no effort is made to keep people apart. The Chinese authorities have greatly
reduced this “reproduction number” through drastic action to isolate cases and trace
their contacts — and the rest of the world is rapidly introducing social distancing
measures.
The virus has caused severe respiratory disease in about 20 per cent of patients and
killed more than 3 per cent of confirmed cases. Sars killed 10 per cent of infected
individuals. Older people, whose immune defences have declined with age, as well as
those with underlying health conditions, are much more vulnerable than the young.
But fatality rates are hard to estimate in the early stages of an epidemic and depend
on the medical care given to patients. For example, ventilators save lives by enabling
people with pneumonia to breathe. Most experts believe the current fatality rate is
exaggerated by serious under-diagnosis of mild cases; the best current estimate is that
Covid-19 will kill around 1 per cent of those infected in a population with good
healthcare.
For comparison, seasonal flu has a mortality rate below 0.1 per cent but it infects so
many people that it results in about 400,000 deaths a year worldwide. Spanish flu
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many people that it results in about 400,000 deaths a year worldwide. Spanish flu
infected an estimated 500m people and killed 50m worldwide in 1918-19.
Hypothetically, if Covid-19 affected half the world’s current population over the
course of a year with a 1 per cent fatality rate, the death toll would be 35m —
substantially increasing the number of deaths worldwide, which is around 60m for all
causes in a typical year.
Respiratory infections are most commonly spread through the air by viral particles in
droplets from a cough or sneeze, though health workers and family members are also
vulnerable to infection through close physical contact with patients without good
barrier protection. A study by the US National Institutes of Health showed that if the
droplets fall on to a surface, the active virus is detectable for up to 24 hours on
cardboard and two or three days on plastic and steel. However contaminated surfaces
are not thought to be the most important transmission route.
The incubation period between infection and symptoms appearing can range from
two to 14 days. About five days is most common, according to the World Health
Organisation.
A study of hospital patients during the original Wuhan outbreak showed that they
were potentially infectious for up to five weeks after first symptoms appeared.
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There is considerable debate among public health experts about the preventive effectiveness of covering the face to prevent infection. © Kevin
Frayer/Getty
Although wearing face masks appears socially obligatory in some east Asian cities
affected by coronavirus, the WHO and many governments say healthy people do not
need to wear a mask unless they are taking care of a person with suspected Covid-19
infection. The advice may be partly an attempt to stop people who don’t need them
trying to buy masks, which are in short supply in many places and urgently needed by
health workers.
However the most effective way to protect against Covid-19 is to minimise encounters
with other people and if possible keep two metres away when you do meet. Clean your
hands frequently, keep them away from your face and cover coughs and sneezes with
the bend of your elbow or a tissue.
In some of the most severe cases, there can be a fatal “cytokine storm” in which the
immune system goes into overdrive, overwhelming the body with cells and proteins
that destroy other organs.
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Nurses in protective gear talk to people in the reception area of the First People's Hospital in Yueyang, Hunan Province, near the border with Hubei
Province © Thomas Peter/Reuters
At the same time scientists are carrying out detailed analysis of the full genetic code of
the virus isolated from Covid-19 patients to track mutations as the epidemic proceeds.
Although this surveillance is showing the inevitable emergence of what some are
calling different viral “strains”, Covid-19 is genetically more stable than flu, with no
significant changes detected so far that might make it significantly more virulent or
transmissible.
How frequently this occurs — and whether it poses a serious risk to efforts to control
the spread of Covid-19 infection — is unknown. Medical specialists still have much to
learn about the way the new coronavirus interacts with the human immune system. If
reinfection really does take place because people mount a very weak response to
infection, that could be bad news for the development of a vaccine.
Programmes to develop vaccines quickly to prevent Covid-19 infection are under way
in dozens of academic and private labs around the world, some under the auspices of
the Oslo-based Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (Cepi) — a $750m
partnership set up in 2017 by governments, industry and charities to prevent future
pandemics.
Although scientists have learnt an astonishing amount about Covid-19 in the months
since the disease was first detected in Wuhan, they do not know yet enough about the
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s ce t e d sease was st detected Wu a , t ey do ot ow yet e oug about t e
virus and how it affects the human immune system to forecast likely outcomes with
any accuracy.
A pandemic is already under way but there are various possible scenarios for its
future development. One extreme is that the disease might affect as much as half the
global population within a year, overwhelming health services and killing tens of
millions of people. The other is the world takes strong enough action to suppress and
then eradicate Covid-19. It is more likely that the virus will hang around for the
indefinite future causing disease similar to flu but becoming less of a threat as time
passes.
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