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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, January 31, 2020
Global Health: Key Questions On Coronavirus Outbreak
kJennifer Nuzzo, an expert in disease outbreak detection and response, discusses what we've learned in the past week about the virus that now infects more than 4,500 people
As the Chinese government increases efforts to contain the spread of
coronavirus in Wuhan, one of the country's central cities and the
epicenter of the outbreak, the death toll and infection rate of the
disease continues to climb.
As of Tuesday morning, 106 deaths can be attributed to the disease and
at least 4,500 cases of coronavirus have been confirmed, an overnight
increase of 60%. Five cases have been confirmed in the U.S., and the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that an additional 110
cases are under investigation in 26 states. Other cases have been
confirmed in France, South Korea, Japan, Nepal, Thailand, Cambodia,
Singapore, Vietnam, Taiwan, Canada and Sri Lanka.
On Monday, Chinese officials expanded a quarantine in Wuhan to include
50 million people in more than a dozen cities, although the mayor of
Wuhan told reporters that 5 million residents had left the region before
travel restrictions were put in place.
For a closer look at how the outbreak has evolved, the Hub reached out
to Jennifer Nuzzo, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for
Health Security and an associate professor in the Bloomberg School of
Public Health. Nuzzo directs the Outbreak Observatory, which works to
document infectious disease outbreaks and how governments respond in
order to develop operational research and improve preparedness and
response.
"We expect to see the number of cases increase as we increase
surveillance, but we also need to pay attention to how the number of
deaths is increasing, and what proportion of reported cases result in
death," Nuzzo said. "Ultimately, what is important is understanding how
severe the illness is."
Nuzzo shared her thoughts on what we've learned in the past week, her
reaction to the quarantine imposed on 50 million residents of Chinese
cities, and what she expects to see as the spread of coronavirus
progresses.
What do we know about the outbreak now that we didn't know a week ago?
One of the things that we are increasingly convinced of is whether this
virus can be spread between people in a sustained fashion. That now very
much appears to be the case, which obviously ratchets up our concerns
about the potential for this virus to spread.
What about the report from the Chinese government that the virus may be contagious before people show symptoms?
That's an area where there's still very much a question mark. Where we
are today, there's actually quite limited evidence to support that, so I
am still skeptical about that until there is more published data
available.
What questions do you still have about the virus and its spread?
I'm very much interested in better understanding what the severity of
the illnesses are that are associated with this virus. Case numbers are
one thing—they can tell us about how widely the virus may be
spreading—but case numbers alone aren't really the factor that worry us
as public health experts.
We expect to see the number of cases increase as we increase
surveillance, but we also need to pay attention to how the number of
deaths is increasing, and what proportion of reported cases result in
death. Ultimately, what is important is understanding how severe the
illness is. Clearly, we know now that some people can get quite ill and a
number of people have died from this virus, but for the most part the
people who have died are those who have had underlying conditions that
can make them susceptible to illness and death from other respiratory
viruses. So one thing we are still trying to understand is how severe
the illnesses are that are associated with this virus.
One puzzling question is that the majority of cases reported in
countries outside of China have been relatively mild. Why would that be?
Is it that healthier people are more inclined to travel? Or is it that
there's something about being in China that makes it likelier for the
illness to progress? Is it simply too early to see severe illnesses in
these countries? There are a lot of questions raised by this
observation.
Has China done enough to contain the outbreak?
There are some key questions that we have to put more effort into
understanding before we can truly understand how much a risk the
situation is, but I'm very alarmed by reports that 5 million people have
left Wuhan. Especially because in many countries, the screening efforts
are contingent on there being a relatively small geographic footprint
for the epicenter of this. Screening agents can ask "Were you recently
in Wuhan," but "Were you in China?" and "Were you in Asia?" become a
much harder endeavor to screen and identify cases.
Is the quarantine an effective containment technique?
I'm deeply worried about the quarantines, mostly because historically
they've had the tendency to backfire. And we always worry when
governments announce an intention to take heavy-handed measures that are
very hard to pull off in a way that doesn't actually harm the people
subjected to them. You have to think about the effects of being asked to
not go anywhere and of shutting down mass transit and what that does to
the availability of food and consumer goods. It's just a massive
endeavor that I'm very skeptical can be pulled off in a way that doesn't
cause harm.
And also—people's willingness to comply with measures may be dependent
on their belief that is in their best interest. If the Chinese
government is doing this in the name of trying to control the spread of
the virus but you already have 5 million people leaving, then
additionally people may want to break free from the restrictions. We
really worry in that scenario about cases being driven
underground—people not wanting to come forward with their illness
because they don't want to be subjected to restrictions or perceived
penalties. But you have to balance that with the complications caused by
the geographic scattering of cases.
What about the U.S.? Are we prepared to respond to coronavirus?
I think that an important thing to consider is what our approach for
diagnosing, testing, and isolating patients will be. The single most
important thing that can be done in this scenario is to isolate sick
patients so that they don't spread the virus to others. But in order to
know who needs to be isolated, we need to have appropriate levels of
diagnostic testing. Health officials in the U.S. are obviously working
on it, and I have confidence that in a week we'll be in a better
situation. But if the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic is a measure, we can expect
that if this virus starts spreading widely, at some point the
laboratories won't be able to test everybody and will have to
reprioritize who gets tested, and maybe at some point even stop testing
as a means of surveillance and focus more on testing for diagnostic and
for treatment purposes.
We've also had a number of identified cases isolated in hospitals, and I
personally think that's not a great idea unless these patients require
medical intervention. If there's a way that keeps infected people who
are not very sick at home, that's preferable to potentially bringing a
virus into a health care environment. We're already short on the
capacity to treat influenza patients, and all sorts of people show up at
hospitals for other, more pressing health needs. If somebody is sick
enough to need hospitalization, then of course they should be admitted.
But a number of these exported cases have a fever and a runny nose. It's
hard for me to imagine that they need to spend weeks in a hospital
until health workers can't detect any virus. That doesn't really seem
like a good use of resources.
What do you expect to see from other governments around the world in response to this outbreak?
I think that we will probably see a situation in which governments will
feel compelled to act, but it is possible to make things worse by how we
act. If we take measures that aren't evidence-based, it can actually do
more harm than good. And that's a very hard thing to figure out, which
actions are best, and often there's a tendency by governments to want to
be perceived as being strong and responsive. Like the China quarantine
example—it could actually backfire and make the situation worse.