Skip to main content

Coronavirus containment is the key, as infections tick up: Tedros

UN News/Laura Quiñones
Travellers who enter Colombia through Bogotá airport are being screened for coronavirus.
    
10 February 2020
Governments should continue to treat containment of the coronavirus as a priority, the head of the UN health agency, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said on Monday.
After earlier describing cases of infection in people with no travel history to China as possibly the “tip of the iceberg”, the World Health Organization Director-General warned in Geneva that while the spread of the respiratory disease appeared to be slow, it could accelerate.
“The detection of this small number of cases could be the spark that becomes a bigger fire, but for now it’s only a spark. Our objective remains containment, we call on all countries to use the window of opportunity that we have to prevent a bigger fire.”
As of Monday, WHO reported 40,235 confirmed cases in China, where the virus was declared on 31 December - and 909 deaths.
Outside the country there have been 319 cases in 24 countries and one death, with reported infections in France and the United Kingdom in the past two days.

Pattern of infections unchanged

The overall pattern of infections had not changed, Tedros told journalists.
Ninety-nine per cent of all cases were in China and most sufferers displayed mild symptoms, while two per cent were fatal, he explained.
At his side, Dr Sylvie Briand, WHO’s Director of Pandemic and Epidemic Diseases, noted that 80 per cent of cases displayed mild symptoms, 15 per cent were severe – developing into pneumonia – and three to five per cent required intensive care.
“This is of course too many,” the WHO chief said of the fatalities, noting that many questions still needed answering, such as where the outbreak was growing and where it was getting better - or worse.
As part of measures to coordinate an international response to the epidemic, on Sunday, Tedros confirmed that WHO had sent an advance team of international epidemiology experts to Beijing, to assist the authorities with the outbreak.

Veteran Ebola expert leads China team

Leading them is Dr Bruce Aylward, a WHO veteran outbreak expert, who recently coordinated the agency’s response to the Ebola epidemic in West Africa.
His job will be to “lay the groundwork” for a larger international team of experts which is expected to follow to China, Tedros said.
WHO’s other measures have included equipping laboratories in some 14 countries with kits to “fast diagnose” infections, including to Cote d’Ivoire, Kenya, Tunisia and Zambia.
This was essential to being able to identify coronavirus infections which can resemble other respiratory bugs, the WHO chief explained.
To date, WHO has identified 168 labs around as having the right technology to identify the coronavirus.
On concerns that the incubation period for the coronavirus could easily be as long as 24 days, Dr Michael Ryan, WHO’s Health Emergencies Programme chief, said that the agency was not considering changing the current 14-day quarantine requirement period.

Cruise ship quarantine in Japan harbour continues

In an update, the UN health agency also reported that all crew and passengers on board a cruise ship harboured in Yokohama, Japan, were being quarantined for a 14-day period on board.
Their quarantine period will come to an end on 19 February, but will be extended for any close contacts of newly confirmed cases, WHO said.
Courtesy:UN News

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

World’s largest hydropower project unravels

Peter Bosshard 08.06.2016 Construction of Congo's Inga dam stumbles over stark environmental concerns, says   Peter Bosshard President Joseph Kabila visits the Three Gorges Dam in September 2015. Chinese contractors are behind the Inga 3 Dam in Congo. (Image by DRC government) The Inga 3 Dam , on the Congo River, is the first stage of a plan to build the world’s largest hydropower complex, the 40,000 MW Grand Inga Dam. Even though more than 90% of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) population has no access to electricity, the project will primarily generate power for mining companies and export markets, such as South Africa. The World Bank and the World Energy Council have presented the Inga 3 Dam as a “dream for Africa”, and a model for the lessons learned from past mega projects. But the hydropower project on the Congo is unravelling into a political ploy that shows a disregard fo...

USA vs N.KOREA (wwIII-GUAM War!) | U.S Army VS North Korean Army/Militar...