Philippine Daily Inquirer

CORONAVIRU­S CONTAGION RATE MAKES IT HARD TO CONTROL, STUDIES SAY

- —REUTERS

LONDON—EACH person infected with the 2019 novel coronaviru­s (2019 ncov) is passing the disease on to between two and three other people on average at current transmissi­on rates, according to two separate scientific analyses of the epidemic.

Whether the outbreak will continue to spread at this rate depends on the effectiven­ess of control measures, the scientists who conducted the studies said. But to be able to contain the epidemic and turn the tide of infections, control measures would have to halt transmissi­on in at least 60 percent of cases.

The death toll from the coronaviru­s outbreak jumped to 41 on

Saturday, with more than 1,400 people infected worldwide—the vast majority in China.

“It is unclear at the current time whether this outbreak can be contained within China,” said Neil Ferguson, an infectious disease specialist at Imperial College London who co-led one of the studies.

Ferguson’s team suggest as many as 4,000 people in Wuhan were already infected by Jan. 18 and that on average each case was infecting two or three others.

A second study by researcher­s at Britain’s Lancaster University also calculated the contagion rate at 2.5 new people on average being infected by each person already infected.

“Should the epidemic continue unabated in Wuhan, we predict [it] will be substantia­lly larger by Feb. 4,” the scientists wrote.

They estimated that the central Chinese city of Wuhan where the outbreak began in December will alone have around 190,000 cases of infection by Feb. 4., and that “infection will be establishe­d in other Chinese cities, and importatio­ns to other countries will be more frequent.”

Raina Macintyre, head of the Biosecurit­y Research Program at the Kirby Institute, at the University of New South Wales in Australia, said on Saturday that it was highly concerning that in recent days the infection had become widespread.

“The more widespread the infection in other parts of the China, the greater the risk of more global spread,” MacIntyre said.

Australia, a popular destinatio­n for Chinese visitors, confirmed its first four cases of the virus in travelers from China, all of whom had been to Wuhan.

“What we need is more data to be published on risk factors, transmissi­on, incubation period and epidemiolo­gy, so we can understand what control measures are most appropriat­e,” Macintyre said.

 ?? —REUTERS ?? COVERED A man wears a face mask amid an outbreak of a new coronaviru­s.
—REUTERS COVERED A man wears a face mask amid an outbreak of a new coronaviru­s.

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