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Australian Government agencies and state and territory governments are working together to coordinate an evidence-based response. This includes:

  • providing information in English and Chinese based on the latest medical advice, including through Facebook, Twitter, Weibo, WeChat and Chinese newspapers
  • applying a 14-day isolation period to people at risk of getting coronavirus
  • applying travel restrictions to reduce the number of travellers from mainland China
  • organising assisted departure for Australian citizens in Wuhan
  • tracing coronavirus cases
  • continuing to screen travellers who arrive in Australia
  • continuing with border surveillance
  • applying enhanced border measures at international air and sea ports, including announcements and signs

State and territory health authorities are:

  • testing anyone who shows symptoms of the virus
  • monitoring close contacts of confirmed cases every day
WWW.HEALTH.GOV.AU

We are monitoring a respiratory illness outbreak caused by a novel (new) coronavirus that was first reported in Wuhan, China. We...

 

In light of the recent public health emergency from the novel Coronavirus originating from Wuhan, Secretary of State has made regulations to ensure that the public are protected as far as possible from the transmission of the virus.

In accordance with Regulation 3, the Secretary of State declares that the incidence or transmission of novel Coronavirus constitutes a serious and imminent threat to public health, and the measures outlined in these regulations are considered as an effective means of delaying or preventing further transmission of the virus.

In accordance with Regulation 2, the Secretary of State designates Arrowe Park Hospital and Kents Hill Park as an “isolation” facility and Wuhan and Hubei province as an “infected area”.

Published 10 February 2020
WWW.GOV.UK

New regulations made by Secretary of State to delay or prevent further transmission of the virus.

 

 

 

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To the press
New Coronavirus Infections Confirmed on a Cruise Ship Quarantined at Yokohama Port (Part 6)
The cruise ship Diamond Princess, which arrived at Yokohama Port on February 3, is undergoing quarantine at sea. Of the 103 new coronavirus test results found, 65 of them were new Coronavirus positivity was confirmed. In the future, it will be transported to medical institutions with infectious disease wards. Positive results were confirmed in 135 of the 439 patients tested.
 
Some of the conveyed persons include elderly people and foreign nationals, and it is necessary to take measures that take into account physical conditions. The press is requested to give special consideration to coverage of this matter.
 
Quarantine of the cruise ship continues to be implemented. A new coronavirus test is conducted for those who need it, and the results will be announced later.

 

 

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Coronavirus Cases: 42,911    Deaths: 1,016    Recovered: 3,957

 

GISANDDATA.MAPS.ARCGIS.COM

 

 

The WHO R&D Blueprintis a global strategy and preparedness plan that allows the rapid activation of R&D activities during epidemics. On 11-12 February, WHO is convening a global research and innovation forum to mobilize international action and enable identification of key knowledge gaps and research priorities to contribute to the control of 2019-nCoV. The forum will include members of the scientific community, researchers from Member States’ public health agencies, regulatory experts, bioethicists with expertise in research in emergencies, and major funder of research related to 2019-nCoV.

WHO RISK ASSESSMENT: China - Very High;  Regional Level - High; Global Level - High;

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Дајте, пустите Тању, није она тема. Сада испада да је, шта год овде неко нешто напише, некакав панични продукт или имплант белосветске завере. Као да на неким другим темама не износимо бојазан и не размишљамо наглас и не бавимо се некаквим анализама и предвиђањима. Смарате са тим шшшшшш хаха коментарима. 

Коме је досадно има Разбибригу. Коме је тема глупа, има других колико хоће. 

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Coronavirus should be seen as 'public enemy number one', says WHO

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says vaccine for COVID-19 virus could be 18 months away

The new coronavirus devastating Chinese cities and spreading into many other countries around the world is “a very grave threat”, the director general of the World Health Organization has warned, comparing its potential with that of terrorism.

“Viruses can have more powerful consequences than any terrorist action,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, after an international meeting of 400 scientists and other experts convened in Geneva to look for solutions to the crisis.

With an estimated 18 months until the first vaccine is available, “we have to do everything today using available weapons,” he said. The rising number of diagnoses in patients who had never visited China could be the “tip of the iceberg”, he added.

Tedros said the virus had been named COVID-19, explaining that it was important to avoid stigma and that other names could be inaccurate.

Under a set of guidelines issued in 2015, WHO advises against using place names such as Ebola and Zika – where those diseases were first identified, and which are now inevitably linked to them in the public mind.

People’s names – usually referring to the scientists who identified the disease – are also banned, as are “terms that incite undue fear” such as “unknown” or “fatal”, the WHO said.

The world must “wake up and consider this enemy virus as public enemy number one,” said Tedros.

Earlier Hong Kong’s leading public health epidemiologist, one of the experts called to Geneva for the meeting, told the Guardian that the coronavirus epidemic could spread to about two-thirds of the world’s population if it could not be controlled.

Prof Gabriel Leung, the chair of public health medicine at Hong Kong University, said the overriding question was to figure out the size and shape of the iceberg. Most experts thought that each infected person would transmit the virus to about 2.5 other people. That gave an “attack rate” of 60-80%.

“60% of the world’s population is an awfully big number,” Leung told the Guardian in London, en route to Geneva on Tuesday.

The virus has killed more than 1,000 people, infected more than 42,000 and reached at least 25 countries, with the WHO declaring a global health emergency.

Even if the general fatality rate was as low as 1%, which Leung thinks is possible once milder cases are taken into account, the death toll would be massive.

Leung planned to tell the WHO meeting that the main issue was the scale of the growing worldwide epidemic, and the second priority was to find out whether the drastic measures taken by China to prevent the spread had worked – because if so, other countries should think about adopting them.

The meeting brings together more than 400 researchers and national authorities, including some participating by video conference from mainland China and Taiwan. To date, China has reported 42,708 confirmed cases, including 1,017 deaths.

Epidemiologists and modellers were trying to figure out what was likely to happen, said Leung. “Is 60-80% of the world’s population going to get infected? Maybe not. Maybe this will come in waves. Maybe the virus is going to attenuate its lethality because it certainly doesn’t help it if it kills everybody in its path, because it will get killed as well,” he said.

Experts also need to know whether restrictions in the centre of Wuhan and other cities have reduced infections. “Have these massive public health interventions, social distancing and mobility restrictions worked in China?” he asked. “If so, how can we roll them out, or is it not possible?”

There would be difficulties. “Let’s assume that they have worked. But how long can you close schools for? How long can you lock down an entire city for? How long can you keep people away from shopping malls? And if you remove those [restrictions], then is it all going to come right back and rage again? So those are very real questions,” he said.

If China’s lockdown has not worked, there is another unpalatable truth to face: that the coronavirus might not be possible to contain. Then the world will have to switch tracks: instead of trying to contain the virus, it will have to work to mitigate its effects.

For now, containment measures are essential. Leung said the period of time during which people were infected but showed no symptoms remained a huge problem. Quarantine was necessary, but to ensure people were not still carrying the virus when they left, everybody should ideally be tested every couple of days. If anyone within a quarantine camp or on a stricken cruise ship tested positive, the clock should be reset to 14 days more for all the others.

Some countries at risk because of the movement of people to and from China have taken precautions. On a visit to Thailand three weeks ago, Leung talked to the health minister and advised the setting up of quarantine camps, which the government has done. But other countries with links to China appear, inexplicably, to have no cases – such as Indonesia. “Where are they?” he asked.

Tedros asked countries to be “as aggressive as possible” in fighting the coronavirus.

“If the world doesn’t want to wake up and consider the virus as public enemy number one, I don’t think we will learn from our lessons,” he said. “We are still in containment strategy and should not allow the virus to have a space to have local transmission.

“We are not defenceless,” Tedros added. “If we invest now … we have a realistic chance of stopping this outbreak.”

No specific treatment or vaccine against the virus exists. The WHO has repeatedly urged countries to share data in order to further research into the disease. “That is especially true in relation to sharing of samples and sequences. To defeat this outbreak, we need open and equitable sharing, according to the principles of fairness and equity,” Tedros told the scientific conference.

He said he hoped the scientists could agree a roadmap “around which researchers and donors will align”.

Several teams of experts in Australia, Britain, China, France, Germany and the US are racing to develop a vaccine – a process that normally takes years.

Efforts to come up with a vaccine are being led by the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), a body established in 2017 to finance costly biotechnology research in the wake of an Ebola outbreak in West Africa that killed more than 11,000 people.

Ultimately, however, scientists may end up in the same situation they were in during the 2002-03 outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) – which died out before a vaccine could be fully developed.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/feb/11/coronavirus-vaccine-could-be-ready-in-18-months-says-who

 

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Welcome to Elsevier's Novel Coronavirus Information Center.

 

Margaret Hessen, MD, Director, Point of Care, ElsevierMargaret Hessen, MD, Director, Point of Care, Elsevier

A week in late January has shown us (again) how rapidly a new disease can take root and spread. Such events are accompanied by an explosion of clinical and epidemiological information and research. The goal of this website is to open whatever resources we can to help public health authorities, researchers and clinicians contain and manage this disease. We will provide continually updated resources from Elsevier's content and experts. Our resources span scientific and medical journals and textbooks, educational products, and a variety of other resources, like travel precautions from the CDC and media posts of interest to our community. We have also created a  interactive global map of experts based on Scopus data.

 

The site is curated by clinical experts from our Global Health business and updated frequently to keep pace with evolving knowledge.

Elsevier, Cell Press and The Lancet have also joined the signatories on the Wellcome Trust’s Statement designed to ensure that research findings and data relevant to this outbreak are shared rapidly and openly to inform the public health response and help save lives.

If you're looking for information on our other free and low-cost access programs, including resources for patients and caregivers, you can find that here.

Margaret Trexler Hessen, MD
Director, Point of Care
Elsevier

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The locking down of the commune of Son Loi, about 40 kilometres from Hanoi, is the first mass quarantine outside of China since the virus emerged from a central Chinese city late last year.

"As of February 13, 2020, we will urgently implement the task of isolation and quarantine of the epidemic area in Son Loi commune," said a health ministry statement.

"The timeline... is for 20 days".

Son Loi is a farming region made up of several villages.

WWW.BANGKOKPOST.COM

BINH XUYEN, Vietnam: Villages in Vietnam with 10,000 people close to the nation's capital were placed under quarantine on...

 

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