Posted on 01/22/2020 11:30:56 AM PST by Red Badger
SEVENTEEN people have died from coronavirus as more than 500 cases of the killer strain were confirmed, officials have said.
Latest figures reveal 471 cases in China, with four in Thailand, two in Hong Kong and one each in the US, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan.
There is also unconfirmed reports of a case in Mexico.
It comes as British experts said up to 10,000 people could already be infected - adding that we can't rule out the possibility" there could already be a case in the UK.
Professor Neil Ferguson, an expert at Imperial College London, said the new strain is currently "as deadly as the Spanish flu epidemic".
The 1918 outbreak is the most severe pandemic in recent history, wiping out an estimated 50 million people across the world.
Prof Ferguson warned of "more deaths to come" as fellow experts said the outbreak has reached the threshold for an international public health emergency - ahead of today's World Health Organization meeting on the issue.
The agency could declare the virus a global health crisis today as its experts rallied to hold an emergency meeting in Geneva today. 'THOUSANDS COULD BE INFECTED'
Officials are considering putting Wuhan - a city of 11 million, a larger population than London - on lockdown, with people being told to stop travelling and to avoid crowds.
It comes at one of the busiest times of the year in China as people prepare to celebrate the Lunar New Year holidays.
The '2019-nCoV' strain has spread to other countries and major cities including Beijing, Shanghai and southern Guangdong province.
Taiwan and the US were the latest countries to confirm a case of the lethal SARS-like virus - after Australian officials said a man tested amid fears he picked up the bug in China was clear.
The new strain has also hit South Korea, Japan, Thailand, Hong Kong, Macau with the World Health Organization predicting it will continue to cross international borders in the coming days.
It comes as Chinese officials confirmed 'novel coronavirus' - which causes pneumonia - can be passed from person to person.
Chinese officials confirmed 471 known cases earlier today, adding another 2,197 people are in isolation after coming into contact with infected people.
So far 765 of those have been released from observation, Li Bin said, adding there is mounting evidence that the bug is being spread through "respiratory transmission".
Li said: "Recently there has been a big change in the number of cases, which is related to our deepening our understanding of the disease, improving diagnostic methods and optimising the distribution of diagnostic kits."
Fifteen healthcare professionals are among those infected.
The mayor of Wuhan confirmed yesterday that an 89-year-old man from the city had become the fourth victim.
A 66-year-old man, known only as Li, and a woman, 48, known as Yin were also confirmed to have died from multiple organ failure.
In Taiwan yesterday, an epidemic response command centre has been set up with more than 1,000 beds prepared in isolation wards in case the virus spreads further.
There, health officials confirmed a woman, thought to be in her 50s, had caught the new strain.
She is currently in hospital and receiving treatment, according to local media reports.
So far, the WHO has not advised travel or trade restrictions but could put such measures in place at tomorrow's emergency meeting. TRAVEL THREAT
It comes as China faces its busiest travel period over Chinese New Year - a time when millions board trains and planes to celebrate the Lunar New Year holidays.
Speaking on LBC leading virologist Professor John Oxford, from Queen Mary College, said he was "quaking in my shoes" at the potential for spread over the holidays.
He said: "None of us have faced a new virus with so many people in a community travelling around.
"That's what's going to happen in China at the end of the week.
"Once they are close together in taxis or small rooms, then there may be a problem.
"The only way to stop it is physical cleaning and social distance - keeping away from people."
While NHS chiefs have urged doctors in the UK to be alert to signs of the killer virus, and screening is due to begin at Heathrow airport, they said today the threat to Brits is "low". GLOBAL AIRPORT SCREENING
At least half a dozen Asian countries and three US airports have started screening incoming airline passengers from central China.
In Australia, border forces have been ordered to ensure all sick passengers are assessed by a trained Biosecurity officer on arrival.
Chief health officer Brendan Murphy said the risk was low but added the three daily flights from Wuhan will be met by medics in response to the "rapidly emerging situation".
State health officials in New South Wales are distributing pamphlets in English and Chinese to all passengers arriving from Wuhan describing the symptoms.
The US has also started screening passengers on flights from Wuhan arriving at John F. Kennedy International Airport, San Francisco International Airport and Los Angeles International airport.
Other international airports are also screening passengers for the mysterious SARS-like disease after it was revealed it had jumped Chinas borders.
A video has been shared widely on Twitter showing people on a domestic flight out of the central Chinese city of Wuhan having their temperature taken one-by-one by people in protective suits.
The origin of the virus is not get known, but experts say the most likely source is an animal - with a new study suggesting bats might be the primary source.
Chinese officials have linked the outbreak last month to a seafood market in the city of Wuhan.
The new strain belongs to a large family of viruses that cause illnesses ranging from the common cold to more severe diseases such as Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). ANIMAL SOURCE
The common early signs of infection include fever, cough, shortness of breath and breathing difficulties, according to WHO.
In more severe cases, it can cause pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, kidney failure and even death.
Initial symptoms of the novel coronavirus include fever, cough, tightness of the chest and shortness of breath, and those seriously ill developed pneumonia.
A Brit on holiday in Thailand is feared to be the first western victim of the illness.
Ash Shorley, 32, was rushed to hospital after the bug infected both lungs while he was on Koh Phi Phi island in Thailand.
The outbreak has caused alarm because of its connection to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), which killed nearly 650 people across mainland China and Hong Kong in 2002-2003.
Coronaviruses cause diseases ranging from the common cold to more severe ones such as SARS.
The Chinese government initially tried to conceal the severity of that epidemic but its cover-up was exposed by a high-ranking physician.
Just think of all the Chinese students coming to study in America...
The major concern here is Mexico with their poor HC and sanitation and then with border jumpers watch out.
The US can handle any cases arriving via plane into the US with screening of passengers.
Yep! One foot on the proverbial banana peel!..............
No. Continuing to mutate is a good thing, illnesses generally mutate towards less fatal. It’s not actually in a bug’s interest to kill the host. It’s already got a very low fatality rate. And we have better medical techniques. There’s a reason none of these super bugs have panned out since we got a good handle on viral theory, and proper sanitation. Many scares, mostly pumped by the government, but in the end nothing actually that bad.
Yeah; that was weird. Eight-and-a-half people died before this. LOL!
The problem with catching a Chinese virus is that
an hour later you want to catch it again.
Mutating bug? They should call it the Adamschiffvirus.
China just can’t get a break.
\It spent all that money on facial reco0gn9ition ... and now people are wearing masks!
Read they’ve quarantined Wuhan. Too late though, cases are being spread in other areas.
Ebola isn’t easily transmitted which limits its potential as a mass killer.
Influenza and other respiratory viruses are highly contagious, which is why the 1918 Flu could kill so many.
1918 was a hybrid flu. Any swine flu or bird flu cross with a human flu is especially dangerous. They leverage your immune system against you and can kill via a cytokine storm.
Apparently these coronaviruses are similar to influenza. Respiratory so easily passed along.
I don’t understand how screening for high temperature helps - it can identify actively ill people, but can’t you be infected with something for a while before you develop symptoms?
17 deaths among 500+ cases. Thats a mortality rate of 3+% in Wuhan, the epicenter of this disease (which is again associated with eating of wild animals)
China claimed that SARS had a mortality rate of 30-50%, when it finally petered-out in 2004.
The only sickness here seems to be the media coverage.
That would be an insult...................................................to the virus!..................
This sounds like a virus that was created in a Lab. It brings some of those doomsday movies to life.
Previously, one of the patients had taken the place of Schroedinger’s Cat, so he was counted as both dead and alive.
https://patents.justia.com/patent/10130701
Its patented!!! Nothing to see here! Move along.
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