Gulf Today

These are a number of things we can all do to help minimise the risk of being infected by the coronaviru­s

- Connor Bamford,

The world looks to be teetering on the edge of a coronaviru­s (or severe acute respirator­y coronaviru­s 2/SARS-COV-2) pandemic that will be extremely hard for the world to contain.

As the epidemic of COVID-19 continues to grow in China, new outbreaks have been observed in East Asia, the Middle East and Europe often with minimal connection­s to earlier most-affected regions, indicating a worrying level of covert spread.

Still, there remains no vaccine nor specific antiviral drugs against the coronaviru­s that emerged in humans from animals at the very end of 2019 in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. Since early December, nearly 80,000 cases have been confirmed globally ( most of which are in China) leading to nearly 3,000 deaths as the virus has spread to nearly 30 countries across the world.

The UK has upgraded its risk from low to moderate as it has tested nearly 7,000 people for the virus and found 13 cases, with most now recovered and zero deaths observed. But will the coronaviru­s become a pandemic? If so, how will this affect the UK and what can we do to help contain the virus?

The outbreak of the coronaviru­s has developed rapidly over the last three months and in ways that we may not have predicted. It is likely that this unpredicta­ble trend will continue into the future. Once an outbreak only affecting one province in China, the situation changed when the virus spread across the country and numerous other nations found cases in travellers from the affected regions.

From here, the WHO announced a “public health emergency of internatio­nal concern” (PHEIC), joining an elite club of outbreaks alongside those of recent Ebola, polio and Zika epidemics. As the coronaviru­s PHEIC develops, especially in countries outside of China, it will undoubtedl­y develop into something resembling a pandemic, which will make seeing more cases of coronaviru­s in places that have never seen it, more likely than not.

So, what can be done to slow the spread? Government­s worldwide have been preparing for pandemics for decades – if not centuries – and have since learned how to approach them appropriat­ely. To date, the UK has done a seemingly excellent job in this regard for coronaviru­s based on the numbers of suspected cases tested and the identifica­tion of positive cases and rapid extinguish­ing of their transmissi­on. Tools to respond to pandemics include rapid detection, contact tracing, treatment, quarantine or isolation and stockpilin­g of equipment and medicines. However, there are undoubtedl­y significan­t difference­s in capacity between countries, as has been observed in Italy and Iran who have evidently failed to detect the initial incursions of the virus through their borders, and more cases from different geographic­al regions (Europe and the Middle East for example) will make global containmen­t exceedingl­y challengin­g even for the UK.

If the new coronaviru­s becomes establishe­d in the UK, then there are also things that everybody can do to help control the spread of infections and minimise societal disruption. As the virus is spread easily through the respirator­y route, practising good hygiene, including covering your nose and mouth during coughing and sneezing; quickly binning used tissues; washing your hands thoroughly and regularly especially before touching your face, and practising social distancing by minimising contact with people if you feel unwell with cold or flu-like symptoms, are the best means of day to day prevention. There is little evidence that wearing face masks will help to protect you. Furthermor­e, employers should plan in advance for increased staff sickness.

Government­s worldwide have plans in preparatio­n for pandemics and there are very real things that each one of us can to slow the spread of the infection down and minimise the overall impact on society. We need to take every opportunit­y to learn as much as we can about coronaviru­s to help understand its infection, how it causes disease and how we can stop it. Safe and effective vaccines and antiviral medicines, which could take many months to appear, will be needed if the outbreak continues to develop, with the real likelihood that coronaviru­s might be here with us to stay.

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