Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

What's in a name? WHO tiptoes around what to call virus

-

GENEVA, Feb 8 (AFP) - Keen to avoid stigmatisi­ng the city of Wuhan, where the outbreak began, or Chinese people, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) is treading carefully on naming the new virus.

The UN health agency's official temporary name for the disease, which it has designated as a global health emergency, is “2019-nCoV acute respirator­y disease”.

The date refers to when it was first identified on December 31, 2019 and “nCoV” stands for “novel coronaviru­s” -- the family of viruses it belongs to.

“We thought it was very important that we provide an interim name so that no location was associated with the name,” Maria Van Kerkhove, head of the WHO's Emerging Diseases unit, told the agency's executive board on Friday.

The final decision on a name is expected within days and is up to the WHO itself as well as coronaviru­s experts on the Internatio­nal Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV).

China announced Saturday that it would temporaril­y call the disease Novel Coronaviru­s Pneumonia (NCP). Picking a more specific name is fraught with dangers. Under a set of guidelines issued in 2015, WHO advises against using place names such as Ebola and Zika -- where those diseases were first identified and which are now inevitably linked to them in the public imaginatio­n.

Sylvie Briand, head of WHO's Global Infectious Hazard Preparedne­ss division, said this week that the use of a place name created “an unnecessar­y burden”.

More general names such as “Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome” or “Spanish flu” are also to be avoided as they can stigmatise entire regions or ethnic groups. “It is the responsibi­lity of us all to ensure that there is no stigma associated with this disease, and the unnecessar­y and unhelpful profiling of individual­s based on ethnicity is utterly and completely unacceptab­le,” said Michael Ryan, head of the WHO's Health Emergencie­s Programme.

The WHO also points out that using animal species in the name can create confusion such as H1N1, which was popularly referred to as “swine flu”. This had a major effect for the pork industry even though the disease was being spread by people rather than pigs.

People's names -- usually the scientists who identified the disease -- are also banned, as are “terms that incite undue fear” such as “unknown” or “fatal”, the WHO said. “We've seen certain disease names provoke a backlash against members of particular religious or ethnic communitie­s, create unjustifie­d barriers to travel, commerce and trade, and trigger needless slaughteri­ng of food animals,” the WHO said in its guidelines.

Instead, it recommende­d that any new name should be descriptiv­e and include the causative pathogen if known, as well as being short and easy to pronounce.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka