While
the first cases of coronavirus 2019-nCoV were reported in China, the virus
has now spread to at
least 23 countries.
All
confirmed cases of 2019-nCoV have so far been linked to Wuhan, the capital of
Hubei province, leading
China to impose severe internal travel restrictions on local residents in
an attempt to limit its spread.
All
reported deaths have occurred in China, with the exception of one man who died
in the Philippines on February 2, just weeks after he had left his hometown of
Wuhan.
The
World
Health Organization (WHO) has declared the 2019-nCoV outbreak a public
health emergency of international concern, though it has emphasized that global
trade and travel restrictions are not needed.
But
it seems the only thing spreading faster than 2019-nCoV is racism.
The
Herald Sun and Daily Telegraph’s front
page headline “Chinese
Virus Pandemonium” is just one of many examples of how the media is using
the outbreak to stoke racism.
Speaking
to The Guardian on
February 2, a British-Chinese national said: “The virus is being weaponized as
a way to be openly racist — the French media have already called it ‘yellow
peril’.”
Some
countries, including Australia, have
closed their borders to almost everyone except Australian citizens entering
from China. Those who do arrive in Australia have their visas cancelled and are
put in quarantine
on Christmas Island.
All
of this has contributed to a spike
in racism against Chinese people.
Western
media and governments have been building a campaign against China because of
its rising economic and political influence, particularly in Africa, Asia and
the Pacific Islands. 2019-nCoV has become a useful tool in this battle.
But
let us examine the facts.
According
to WHO, coronaviruses are from a large family of viruses that have led to
illnesses ranging from the common cold to more severe diseases. There are
several different coronaviruses that can be group into four types: alpha, beta,
gamma and delta. The common cold can be caused by alpha and beta coronaviruses.
2019-nCoV,
a new strain of coronavirus not previously identified in humans, is in the beta
group. Because it is a virus and not a bacteria, antibiotics cannot treat the
infection. Instead, a specific vaccine is required.
Coronaviruses
can be transmitted between animals and people via physical contact, much like Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
(SARS) was in 2002–03 and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome
(MERS) in 2012. More coronaviruses in animals are likely to be identified
as surveillance improves around the world.
The
first cases were discovered in December in Wuhan, in a food market where meats,
poultry and fish, as well as live reptiles and wild game, were sold. Chinese
national authorities alerted WHO of a viral outbreak on December 31 and closed
the market on January 1.
About
10 days after the market was closed, the first victim died: a 61-year-old man
who was chronically ill and whose wife developed symptoms five days later. She
had never visited the market, indicating human-to-human transmission.
2019-nCoV
is generally transmitted through close contact with an infected patient. A key
factor influencing transmission is whether the virus can spread in the absence
of symptoms — either in the days before they appear or in people who never get
sick.
Common
symptoms include respiratory symptoms, fever, cough, shortness of breath and
breathing difficulties, many of which can be treated. In more severe cases,
infection can cause pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, kidney
failure or death.
2019-nCoV
is less virulent than SARS, which had a 10% fatality rate and killed nearly 650
people in China and Hong Kong.
However,
2019-nCoV is more infectious, having been transmitted to at least 20,000 people
as of February 4, compared with SARS, which took 8 months to infect 8000
people.
To
date, 2019-nCoV has caused severe respiratory symptoms in 16–20% of patients
and has a fatality rate of 2–3%, with a death toll in China of 425.
For
comparison, seasonal influenza has a mortality rate below 0.1%, but infects
many more people and causes about 400,000 deaths each year. The 2009 flu
pandemic in the United States, caused by the spread of a novel strain of
the A/H1N1
virus, commonly referred to as swine
flu, infected 59 million US citizens, leading to 265,000 hospitalizations
and 12,000 deaths.
Evidently,
the Western media’s response to 2019-nCoV is alarmist.
The
Chinese government has learnt from the SARS epidemic and is doing everything
possible to control the spread of the disease. Unlike during the SARS epidemic,
Chinese scientists have published the genetic sequence of 2019-nCoV to enable
easier diagnosis in all laboratories.
The
Chinese government also built two new hospitals in Wuhan within two weeks.
A
crash program to develop a vaccine is under way under the auspices of the
Oslo-based Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations. Scientists from The
Doherty Institute in Melbourne have successfully grown the virus from a patient
sample, the first time outside of China, an achievement that will hopefully
speed up the development of a vaccine.
Governments
should aid these efforts and carry out best practice measures to prevent the
further spread of 2019-nCoV, rather than demonize China and whip up racism for
nothing more than political gain.
>> The article above was written by Coral Wynter, and is reprinted from Green Left Weekly.
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