Coronavirus: It’s Not Just the ‘Flu’

The official death toll has surpassed 1,000, according to official figures. The actual toll may be far higher in China. Bodies may be cremated without a diagnosis, and Chinese authorities are ruthlessly censoring nonofficial reports. A whistleblower, Fang Bin, who shot videos of corpses in Wuhan, has reportedly been arrested.

Some may downplay the severity of the problem, noting that seasonal influenza kills tens of thousands every year. But these are some ways in which 2019-nCoV is different:

  • Influenza has been everywhere for a long time, so most people have some degree of immunity. The “n” in 2019-nCoV stands for “novel.” The whole world is a “virgin population” for this newly emerged virus.
  • The incubation period for influenza is up to 4 days. While 2019-nCoV may cause symptoms relatively soon, infected but apparently healthy people may be contagious for 14 days or even 24 days.
  • Influenza infects the upper respiratory tract. If a patient gets pneumonia, it is likely a bacterial superinfection curable with antibiotics. The 2019-nCoV targets the lower respiratory tract, causing severe viral pneumonia, which may not manifest until a week into the illness.
  • Older patients with pre-existing illnesses are the most likely to die of influenza. Young, healthy persons may also succumb to 2019-nCoV. The Chinese eye doctor who first sounded the alarm is dead at age 34.
  • Influenza survivors are expected to recover completely. The coronavirus may cause scarring in the lungs. The receptor targeted by 2019-nCoV in lung cells is also in the kidneys, so severely affected patients may have renal failure or multiorgan failure.

Unless the disease can be contained, The coronavirus epidemic could spread to about two-thirds of the world’s population, according to Hong Kong’s leading public health epidemiologist, Prof Gabriel Leung.

The importance of effective quarantine is shown by the history of American Samoa and Western Samoa in the 1918 influenza pandemic. American Samoa, which enforced rigid quarantine, had no fatalities. Western Samoa permitted commerce to continue, lost 24% of its population, including half of the most productive age group, and collapsed.

Africa is especially vulnerable. About 1,500 passengers from China arrive in Ethiopia every day. Africa is only now receiving 2019-nCoV test kits.

For more about pandemic preparedness and links to information on protecting yourself and your family, see Doctors for Disaster Preparedness Newsletter, September 2019.

Coronavirus: How Bad Is It Really?

The number of confirmed cases of novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) has officially reached 30,877, with 636 deaths, according to the interactive map provided by Johns Hopkins CSSE (Center for Systems Science and Engineering). The “total recovered” is listed as 1,503. One can only guess about has happened or will happen to the other 28,748 cases.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website states: The new coronavirus has “resulted in thousands of confirmed cases in China, including cases outside Wuhan City. Additional cases have been identified in a growing number of other international locations, including the United States.” The CDC has not posted first-hand reports from China. Have officials been allowed to visit?

Figures that transiently appeared  on Tencent’s “Epidemic Situation Tracker” were 10 times higher than government reports, with the death toll reaching nearly 25,000. Just a “fat finger” mistyping? Or is there double bookkeeping?

Bodies transferred directly from hospitals are reportedly lined up at crematoria to await incineration.

In other news:

  • The CDC will be sending test kits to some 100 testing stations in the U.S.
  • Panic buyers in Hong Kong are snapping up toilet paper, rice, and pasta.
  • The origin of the 2019-nCoV is said to be from bats. The genetic make-up of virus from Chinese patients is reportedly 96% similar to one found in bats. (The human genome is 98.8% similar to that of chimpanzees.) This does not rule out deliberate bioengineering.
  • Dr. Li Wenliang, a Chinese physician sanctioned for purportedly “spreading rumors” when he sounded an early alarm about a SARS-like illness cropping up in Wuhan, has died of the novel coronavirus.
  • Some medical supply stocks are soaring as suppliers run out of masks and gloves. China is a major producer of protective equipment and the sole source for many drug precursors.

For more about pandemic preparedness and links to information on protecting yourself and your family, see Doctors for Disaster Preparedness Newsletter, September 2019.

Coronavirus: New Symptoms, More Censorship

The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus (2019-nCoV) has reached 20,209, with 426 deaths, according to the interactive map provided by Johns Hopkins CSSE (Center for Systems Science and Engineering).

Another city has been quarantined: Wenzhou, which is nearly 600 miles from Wuhan. Only one designated person within each family household will be allowed to go outdoors, once every two days, to shop for basic necessities.

Crematoria are working constantly. Hong Kong-based Initium Media reported on Jan 26 that all 14 cremation chambers in one large funeral home are operating 24 hours a day, seven days per week, rather than four hours per day, five days per week, as before the outbreak.

China is furious about the expanding U.S. travel ban, claiming that it is unnecessary, in the opinion of the World Health Organization (WHO).

For all the claims about transparency, police reportedly arrested the Chinese doctors to raise the alarm about a disease they at first suspected of being SARS (severe acute respiratory distress syndrome) on WeChat, a popular social network. The authorities said these eight doctors and medical technicians were “misinforming” the public, and that everyone in the city must remain calm. Authorities are still actively censoring social-media posts and news articles that question the government’s response to the outbreak.

In the U.S., Facebook is censoring what it deems to be misinformation. Facebook’s head of health, Kang-Xing Jin, said in a blogpost Thursday that it has a third-party team of fact-checkers reviewing content related to the virus. Google and Twitter are directing traffic to official sources such as WHO and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and Twitter said it would remove users “who attempt coordinated spreads of disinformation about the health crisis.”

A report on travelers returning to Germany from China  states that digestive symptoms occur in some patients, presenting another mode of transmission. Infective virus in diarrheal fluid may be aerosolized when flushing a toilet. (Closing the lid is suggested.)

It is becoming difficult or impossible to buy personal protective items. Home Depot informed a customer that it was unable to process an order for N95 protective masks “due to the  drastic increase and restrictions put in place by the [CDC].”

For further information, with links to information on protecting yourself and your family, see Doctors for Disaster Preparedness Newsletter, September 2019.