“The Evolution of Coronaviruses: A History of SARS and COVID-19 Pandemic Crisis”

2023-04-20 12:45:00

The novel coronavirus has spread and evolved around the world, causing more than 700 million cases of infection and more than 6 million deaths. It is almost certain that it has settled in the population and has become an endemic virus. This is the biggest setback since human beings fight against infectious diseases. The coronavirus that only caused cold symptoms in humans 70 years ago evolved into the deadly SARS for the first time 20 years ago. After that, different coronaviruses caused a bigger plague every less than 10 years. He Meixiang, an epidemiologist at the Academia Sinica, believes that new epidemics will inevitably recur in the future, and a global epidemic prevention strategy is an urgent task for mankind.

We are on the brink of a global crisis of an infectious disease from which no country is immune and no country can rest easy.

published by the World Health Organization in 1996world health reportIn the above passage, the above passage is used to warn the world that at least 17 million people die from infectious diseases every year, and the control of infectious diseases will become increasingly difficult. Around this time, Ebola filovirus and H1N1 bird flu with a fatality rate of 50% appeared in the world, as well as Nipah paramyxovirus with a fatality rate of 20%.

At that time, the coronavirus was not noticed and considered a threat to human beings.

Coronavirus under a microscope. (Photo/AFP)

The first “epidemic” of the coronavirus, the outbreak of SARS

In November 2002, a similar case of pneumonia was reported in Guangdong Province, China. The patient had fever, dry cough, and difficulty breathing due to pneumonia.Chinese authorities dispatched an investigative team in January, held in Guangdong province on February 10press conferencesaying that 305 people in Guangdong suffered from “atypical pneumonia” and 5 died, but the epidemic has been effectively controlled, and emphasized that compared with the tens of millions of people in Guangzhou, atypical pneumonia is only a local occurrence.

On February 17, 2003, there were SARS patients in Guangzhou City, Guangdong Province, South China, and an isolation area was set up in the hospital. (Photo/AFP)

At this time, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the world are still unaware that the news of China’s blockade of SARS has spread, and this emerging disease is evolving into a major epidemic that impacts the modern medical system. Until March, confirmed cases were reported in other countries, and the WHO became alert. Jiang Yanyong, a retired Chinese military doctor known as the “SARS whistleblower”, also warned the world.

China hides the epidemic and runs away

“As a doctor who cares about people’s lives and health, I have the responsibility to assist international and local efforts to prevent the spread of SARS.” On April 8, 2003, Jiang Yanyong, who lives in Beijing, China, wrote a letter to the international media to expose the SARS epidemic in China and stated Make public the Chinese authorities’ cover-up of the epidemic.

Many foreign media reported that Jiang Yanyong passed away on March 14, 2023, at the age of 91, but the Chinese authorities did not confirm it. (Photo/Associated Press)

The American “Time Magazine” first disclosedJiang Yanyong’s letterPointing out that as of April 8, doctors at the 309th Hospital of the People’s Liberation Army in Beijing told Jiang Yanyong that they had treated 60 SARS patients, of whom 7 died; 12 cases of SARS were found, 3 of them died.

Jiang Yanyongxin stated that the medical staff of the PLA Hospital in Beijing had been informed of the danger of atypical pneumonia as early as the beginning of the National People’s Congress in early March, and were asked not to disclose it.

Jiang Yanyong’s warning letter forced the Chinese government to disclose the situation of SARS prevention and control work, and fired Zhang Wenkang, the party secretary of the Ministry of Health at the time, and Meng Xuenong, deputy secretary of the Beijing Municipal Party Committee, for improper handling of the epidemic. However, the SARS epidemic that originated in Guangdong had already spread. It spread to North China in early March and spread to 26 provinces and cities in mid-to-late April.

The chain of transmission of the virus also crossed out of China in late February. According to WHOpostmortem investigation64-year-old Liu Jianlun, a professor of medicine at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, was the first recorded super-spreader of the SARS virus.

After the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong, there were hawkers selling masks on the road. (Photo/AFP)

Liu Jianlun arrived in Hong Kong on February 21 and died of illness in Hong Kong on the 23rd. The hospital also failed to detect it in time, and nosocomial infections broke out. die. And Liu Jianlun stayed in a hotel in Hong Kong before his death, which also caused 13 passengers to be infected, and spread the virus to Hong Kong, Canada, Vietnam, Germany and Singapore.

The World Health Organization (WHO) released on March 15Global Emergency Travel Advisory, said it received more than 150 suspected cases of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) of unknown etiology in the past week, including from Canada, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. This is also the first time the WHO named the disease SARS.

On April 16, 2003, the World Health Organization officially confirmed that SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV) was the pathogen of SARS. At that time, the virus had already quietly arrived in Taiwan.

Nosocomial infection broke out in Taiwan-occupied Heping Hospital and the hospital was closed

The investigation published by the Epidemic Management Agency in the Special Issue on SARS Epidemic PreventionIt is pointed out that Taiwan has had cases imported from abroad since March. At that time, the epidemic prevention and control were still smooth. Until March 29, a Ms. Cao claimed to be suspected of being infected by a passenger who kept coughing on the train. Her symptoms did not improve after being treated by three clinics. On April 9th, I went to Heping Hospital to take X-rays and was judged to be suspected of SARS; but the hospital did not disinfect the isolation gowns in the X-ray room that day, causing the outsourced laundry worker surnamed Liu to be infected when delivering the gowns.

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The laundry worker developed a fever and diarrhea on April 12, and was hospitalized on April 16. Cluster infections broke out in the hospital. On April 24, the Taipei City Government ordered the Heping Hospital to be closed, hoping to control the epidemic. 346 people were diagnosed and 73 people died, including 7 medical staff who died in the line of duty.

In the end, the SARS virus spread to 29 countries, causing 8,096 infections and 774 deaths. Until July 5, 2003, the World Health Organization announced that the last chain of human-to-human transmission of SARS had been broken, the epidemic was over, and the virus disappeared for 20 years.

However, He Meixiang, an epidemiologist at the Academia Sinica, said that SARS is an ancient virus in animals. The epidemic on humans has ended, but it still continues to survive in the original host—bats.

Lessons from the coronavirus: a global pandemic crisis

Since 1960, British virologist Dr. Almeida (June Almeida) first discovered coronavirus on a British student’s specimen through a microscope, and published the research results in 1965 to name it. It has been nearly 50 years since For 20 years, humans have not considered this family of viruses with crowned protrusions on the cell membrane to be a threat.

So far, a total of 7 coronaviruses infecting humans have been identified in the world: HCoV-229E, HCoV-OC43, HCoV-NL63, HCoV-HKU1, SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2. Only causes common cold symptoms. However, since SARS, coronaviruses have brought deadly emerging diseases to humans every less than 10 years, including Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Infection (MERS) and COVID-19.

MERS-CoV virus outbreak in 2012MERS-CoV infection, the highest fatality rate was as high as 36%, and there were still outbreaks during the World Cup in Qatar last year. Although the number of cases exported from the Middle East is increasing around the world, except for the suspected local infection in South Korea in 2015, there are few subsequent cases of infection outside the Middle East.

The SARS-CoV-2 virus has caused the COVID-19 outbreak since 2019,World Health Organization StatisticsBy April 2023, there will be over 700 million confirmed cases and over 6 million deaths. The virus is still spreading around the world.

Vaccines cannot clear the virus, what is the next step for humans?

Although why did SARS suddenly disappear? Will MERS spread beyond the Middle East again? There are still puzzles to be solved, but more than 13 billion doses of vaccines have been administered around the world to eradicate COVID-19, the greatest plague in human history, according to the World Health Organization. However, Chen Xiuxi, a professor of public health at National Taiwan University, said that from the experience of COVID-19, the vaccine has limited effect on preventing and blocking the coronavirus. warning line.

He Meixiang also believes that after the outbreak of the epidemic, Pfizer, which was the first to develop a COVID-19 vaccine within a year, was hailed as achieving an impossible mission like “landing on the moon”, but even if new technologies allow humans to develop a new vaccine Vaccines can be shortened to 100 days at the earliest. When facing emerging infectious diseases next time, “We must think about whether we can withstand the initial 100-day spread of the epidemic?”

At present, there is no conclusion about the intermediate host through which the SARS-CoV-2 virus is transmitted from bats to humans.Collected by the U.S. Department of Health Servicesresearch shows, after genetic analysis, SARS-CoV-2 may also have originated from pangolins, and a high proportion of SARS-CoV-2 was sampled in Malayan pangolins. The study also pointed out that pangolins are the mammals with the most illegal wildlife smuggling. If the wildlife trade cannot be effectively controlled, pangolin coronaviruses may pose a threat to public health.

Recalling that the outbreaks from SARS to COVID-19 all originated in China and were related to contact with wild animals. He Meixiang pointed out that the three coronaviruses are all cross-species transmission, which shows that as the habitats of humans and animals overlap more and more, it will give more harm to humans. There are new opportunities for viruses to cause diseases to humans. Even if the live animal market for selling wild game continues to exist, new epidemics will inevitably recur; Risk of virus exposure.

Chen Xiuxi also reminded that the long-term new crown phenomenon also provides a new evidence that the coronavirus can survive for a long time in humans with poor immunity. This phenomenon may promote virus mutation; in addition to monitoring the relationship between humans and ecological animals in the future, it is also necessary to monitor the coronavirus In the development of the human body, a two-pronged approach is taken to prevent the advent of new epidemics.

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