The novel zoonotic COVID-19 pandemic: An expected global health concern

18 years ago, in 2002, the world was astonished by the appearance of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), supported by a zoonotic coronavirus, called SARS-CoV, from the Guangdong Province of southern China. After about 10 years, in 2012, another similar coronavirus triggered the Middle East Res...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of infection in developing countries 2020-03, Vol.14 (3), p.254-264
Hauptverfasser: Contini, Carlo, Di Nuzzo, Mariachiara, Barp, Nicole, Bonazza, Aurora, De Giorgio, Roberto, Tognon, Mauro, Rubino, Salvatore
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 254
container_title Journal of infection in developing countries
container_volume 14
creator Contini, Carlo
Di Nuzzo, Mariachiara
Barp, Nicole
Bonazza, Aurora
De Giorgio, Roberto
Tognon, Mauro
Rubino, Salvatore
description 18 years ago, in 2002, the world was astonished by the appearance of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), supported by a zoonotic coronavirus, called SARS-CoV, from the Guangdong Province of southern China. After about 10 years, in 2012, another similar coronavirus triggered the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS-CoV) in Saudi Arabia. Both caused severe pneumonia killing 774 and 858 people with 8700 cases of confirmed infection for the former, and 2494 for the latter, causing significant economic losses. 8 years later, despite the MERS outbreak remaining in certain parts of the world, at the end of 2019, a new zoonotic coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) and responsible of coronavirus Disease (COVID-19), arose from Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. It spread rapidly and to date has killed 3,242 persons with more than 81,000 cases of infection in China and causing over 126,000 global cases and 5,414 deaths in 166 other countries around the world, especially Italy. SARS-CoV-2 would seem to have come from a bat, but the intermediate reservoir continues to be unknown. Nonetheless, as for SARS-CoV and MERS CoV, the Spillover effect linked to animal-human promiscuity, human activities including deforestation, illegal bush-trafficking and bushmeat, cannot be excluded. Recently, however, evidence of inter-human only transmission of SARS-CoV-2 has been accumulated and thus, the outbreak seems to be spreading by human-to-human transmission throughout a large part of the world. Herein we will provide with an update on the main features of COVID-19 and suggest possible solutions how to halt the expansion of this novel pandemic.
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subjects Animals
Betacoronavirus
Biological Evolution
Camelus
China - epidemiology
Chiroptera
Civil Defense
Communicable Diseases, Emerging
Coronavirus - genetics
Coronavirus Infections - drug therapy
Coronavirus Infections - epidemiology
Coronavirus Infections - prevention & control
Coronavirus Infections - therapy
Coronavirus Infections - transmission
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
Disease Outbreaks
Disease Reservoirs
Disease transmission
Epidemiological Monitoring
Global Health
Human Activities
Italy
Middle East respiratory syndrome
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus
Pandemics
Pandemics - prevention & control
Pneumonia, Viral - epidemiology
Pneumonia, Viral - prevention & control
Pneumonia, Viral - therapy
Pneumonia, Viral - transmission
Respiratory diseases
SARS Virus
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome - epidemiology
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Viral Vaccines
Zoonoses
Zoonoses - epidemiology
title The novel zoonotic COVID-19 pandemic: An expected global health concern
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