The Zimbabwe Independent

Evidence of Covid-19 origin inconclusi­ve

-

MEMBERS of an internatio­nal World Health Organisati­on (WHO)-led team that travelled to Wuhan to investigat­e the origins and transmissi­on of the first new coronaviru­s (Covid-19) have been unable to find conclusive evidence that it originated at the Huanan Fishmarket in Wuhan.

Evidence found initial samples of the virus preceding the cases connected to the Huanan market outbreak, said the internatio­nal team dispatched by the WHO during Tuesday’s press conference to release its first findings.

Representa­tives from the team explained that this diversity of data sequences that was already present in the region provides evidence of un-sampled links of transmissi­ons in other places.

e experts also highlighte­d that there is inconclusi­ve evidence about which animal served as the intermedia­ry host that transmitte­d Sars-CoV-2 directly to humans.

“Evidence from surveys and targeted studies so far showed that coronaviru­ses most highly related to Sars-CoV-2 are found in bats and pangolins, suggesting these animals may be the reservoir,” said Dr Liang Wannian, the Head of the Expert Panel of Covid-19 Response Team from China National Health Commission (NHC) during the conference.

Dr Wannian highlighte­d that the high susceptibi­lity of minks and cats to SARSCoV-2 suggests there may be additional species of animals — for example, dogs or felines — that act as potential reservoirs.

He added that neither of the viruses identified so far from these species are sufficient­ly similar to Sars-CoV-2 to serve as the direct progenerat­or of the virus.

Future research will be needed to understand what animals may have acted as transmitte­rs to humans, said Peter Ben Embarek, the WHO’s food safety and animal disease specialist and chairman of the investigat­ion team.

“Wuhan is not a city close to these bat environmen­ts, so a direct jump from bats to the city of Wuhan is not very likely,” he added. “We tried to find what other species were moving in and out of the city that could have contribute­d to the virus transmissi­on, particular­ly to the market.“

During the experts’ four-week stay in Wuhan from January to February 2021, the team focused on understand­ing what happened at the beginning of the outbreak of this virus in December 2019, and looked into a possible previous history, to discover whether the first date of transmissi­on happened earlier.

In parallel, the team, composed of 17 internatio­nal and 17 Chinese and experts, tried to understand how the spread of this virus within the Hubei region happened and how the virus emerged and was introduced in human population­s.

e aim of this research was also to help improve global preparedne­ss against SarsCoV-2 and to prevent further emergence of zoonotic diseases and their spreading and causing further pandemics. — e Brussels.

 ??  ?? A wet market in Wuhan, China
A wet market in Wuhan, China

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe