The Arizona Republic

Coronaviru­s not a pandemic ... yet

US health official warns of ‘severe’ disruption­s

- John Bacon and Ken Alltucker

Although the World Health Organizati­on as recently as Monday determined that the term pandemic “did not fit the facts” regarding the spread of the new coronaviru­s, experts say it very soon could.

And a federal health official offered a warning Tuesday: “Disruption to everyday life may be severe” in the U.S., said Nancy Messonnier, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases. Schools in some areas could be forced to close and businesses shuttered, she said.

A federal health official warned Tuesday that the deadly coronaviru­s could cause “severe” disruption­s in the U.S. as global experts struggled to fend off the outbreak and avoid a pandemic.

But is it too late? “Disruption to everyday life may be severe” in the U.S., Nancy Messonnier, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases, warned Tuesday. Schools in some areas could be forced to close and businesses shuttered.

Messonnier said the coronaviru­s already has caused sickness and death, and it has sustained person-to-person transmissi­on. Those are two of the three factors for a pandemic, she said.

“As community spread is detected in more and more countries, the world moves closer to meeting the third criteria – worldwide spread of the new virus,” Messonnier said.

Although the World Health Organizati­on as recently as Monday determined that the term pandemic “did not fit the facts,” experts say it soon could.

Dennis Carroll, former director of the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t’s Global Health Security and Developmen­t Unit, credited China’s “extraordin­ary control measures” with delaying the spread of the virus. But he said avoiding a pandemic is “very unlikely.”

“The dramatic uptick of cases in South Korea, Iran and Italy are reflective of a self-sustaining spreading of the virus,” said Carroll, who leads the Global Virome Project science cooperativ­e. “And a clear message that the horse is out of the barn.”

Melissa Nolan, a medical doctor and professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of South Carolina’s Arnold School of Public Health, also cited the new clusters in Iran, now facing at least 95 cases and 16 deaths, and Italy, with 322 cases.

“If we continue to see focalized local transmissi­on in areas outside of China, the WHO will need to reconvene,” Nolan said. “We are very close to seeing this virus becoming a pandemic.”

Nolan said responses to the outbreaks in Iran and Italy could help health officials in other countries prepare their own medical and quarantine policies ahead of an outbreak. That is crucial, said Robert Glatter, an emergency physician at New York’s Lenox Hill Hospital, who said the world is on the “cusp” of pandemic.

“Trying to contain a disease which spreads like influenza, in this case COVID-19, is almost impossible,” he said. “We are talking about rapid-fire and sustained transmissi­on.”

That means redirectin­g the focus from containmen­t measures to preparing for treatment of big numbers of sick patients with antivirals while continuing the effort to develop an effective vaccine, he said.

Beyond an epidemic, which involves a defined region, a pandemic has global impact.

 ??  ?? EBRAHIM NOROOZI/AP Workers disinfect subway trains early Wednesday in Tehran, Iran. Iran’s government said more than a dozen people have died in the country because of coronaviru­s, rejecting claims of a lawmaker who said the toll was 50.
EBRAHIM NOROOZI/AP Workers disinfect subway trains early Wednesday in Tehran, Iran. Iran’s government said more than a dozen people have died in the country because of coronaviru­s, rejecting claims of a lawmaker who said the toll was 50.
 ??  ?? RICHARD DREW/AP
RICHARD DREW/AP
 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP ?? Staffers with South Korea’s Chonnam National University wait at the airport in Incheon for Chinese students returning from holiday.
AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP Staffers with South Korea’s Chonnam National University wait at the airport in Incheon for Chinese students returning from holiday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States