he and other experts have learned so far— and the critical questions they are
still pursuing:
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How to reduce the risk of infection?
•
Signs
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What to do if you think you may be infected?
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Tips for travelers to and from China, the epicenter of the outbreak
•
How U.S. health officials respond to the virus
•
What doctors and healthcare workers need to know
Bedford's and other analyzes of the genetic sequences of some of the first
human cases found that after it first appeared the virus had a surprising lack
of genetic diversity from person to person. First,
there was not sufficient
evidence to clarify what this meant — was the virus repeatedly springing
from animals to humans or, more seriously, spreading rapidly among humans
after an initial animal jump? “These two cases cannot be separated by DNA”.
Only the reservoir animal can get epidemiological data or DNA. Figuring this
out will presently be the main epidemiological target for everyone.
I think we're looking at a pandemic if it's not implemented early, "Bedford
told STAT News on Jan. 27— though he warned it was impossible to say
how serious a Covid-19 pandemic would be. Such work by Bedford and other
virus trackers is possible due to the rapid genetic
sequencing of infected
people— unfeasible or even unlikely not too many years ago— and a
collective effort to openly share such genetic data with the research
community around the world.
Basically, a week after reporting that there is this new thing; China's
outstanding scientists have a genome for the novel virus that had never before
been seen. That first genome was great for people developing quick testing to
actually be able to validate cases and these subsequent genomes are very
useful in understanding simple epidemiological issues. "Adding
a few main
samples will change the story dramatically, due to the rapidly evolving nature
of the disease.
With access to additional genetic sequences from more infected people,
teammates from Bedford and Nextstrain wrote on a post on their site on Jan.
30 that the low mutation rate of the disease is the result of spreading person-
to-person from unknown animals to humans in November or early December
2019 since its initial jump. The team also wrote in their Jan. 30 report: While
the virus has started to catch up mutations as it spreads among people— as
this form of virus naturally does — such mutations do not appear to be
related to changes in the actions of the virus. The new virus seems to be less
likely to kill those with confirmed cases than its corona virus predecessor,
SARS, but data are too scant for firm conclusions.
Bedford and colleagues explain their latest data on the Covid-19 spread and
evolution around the world. The map shows the number and location of viral
sequences they study as the virus spread out of China from cases around the
world. Meanwhile, a new analysis of the first 425
people with the virus,
reported by a research team based in China in the New England Journal of
Medicine on January 29, found that it takes about five days for a person who
is eventually diagnosed with the disease to develop symptoms following their
initial infection with the virus.