The Pandemic Cure That Could Have Been!
So it seems that had the U.S. Federal government not forsaken us in 2015 by failing to fund a vaccine for coronavirus we would have been able to quell the 2020 pandemic. While the Donald Trump is constantly being blamed for inaction, I lay the blame solely on the inaction of then President Barack Obama. I am pasting the citation in this blog since there is a good chance that Google will remove the original article!
New SARS-like virus can jump directly from bats to humans,
no treatment available
Findings
provide an opportunity to develop drugs and vaccines for coronaviruses before
they emerges from animals to cause a human epidemic
Science
Daily – sciencedaily.com
New SARS-like virus can jump directly from bats to humans,
no treatment available
Findings
provide an opportunity to develop drugs and vaccines for coronaviruses before
they emerges from animals to cause a human epidemic
Date: November 10, 2015
Source: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Summary:
A new bat SARS-like
virus has been discovered that can jump directly from its bat hosts to humans
without mutation. However, researchers point out that if the SARS-like virus
did jump, it is still unclear whether it could spread from human to human.
FULL STORY
Researchers from the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill have discovered a new bat SARS-like virus that
can jump directly from its bat hosts to humans without mutation. However,
researchers point out that if the SARS-like virus did jump, it is still unclear
whether it could spread from human to human.
The discovery, reported
in the Nov. 9 issue of Nature
Medicine, is notable not only because there is no treatment for
this newly discovered virus, but also because it highlights an ongoing debate
over the government's decision to suspend all gain of function experiments on a
variety of select agents earlier this year. The move has put a substantial
standstill on the development of vaccines or treatments for these pathogens
should there be an outbreak.
"Studies have predicted the existence of nearly 5,000
coronaviruses in bat populations and some of these have the potential to emerge
as human pathogens," said senior author Ralph Baric, a faculty member at
the Gillings School of Global Public Health and expert in coronaviruses. "So this is not a
situation of 'if 'there will be an outbreak of one of these coronaviruses but
rather when and how prepared we'll be to address it."
SARS first jumped from animals to humans in 2002-2003 and caused
a worldwide outbreak, resulting in 8,000 cases, including one case in Chapel
Hill. With nearly 800 deaths during that outbreak, SARS-CoV presents much like
flu symptoms but then can accelerate, compromise breathing and bring on a
deadly form of pneumonia. The outbreak was controlled through public health
interventions and the original virus was thought to have been extinct since
2004.
Baric and his team demonstrated that the newly-identified
SARS-like virus, labeled SHC014-CoV and found in the Chinese horseshoe bats,
can jump between bats and humans by showing that the virus can latch onto and
use the same human and bat receptor for entry. The virus also replicates as
well as SARS-CoV in primary human lung cells, the preferred target for
infection.
"This virus is
highly pathogenic and treatments developed against the original SARS virus in
2002 and the ZMapp drugs used to fight Ebola fail to neutralize and control
this particular virus," said Baric. "So building resources, rather
than limiting them, to both examine animal populations for new threats and
develop therapeutics is key for limiting future outbreaks."
[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "New
SARS-like virus can jump directly from bats to humans, no treatment available:
Findings provide an opportunity to develop drugs and vaccines for coronaviruses
before they emerges from animals to cause a human epidemic." ScienceDaily.
ScienceDaily, 10 November 2015.
<www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/11/151110115711.htm>]
Story Source:
Materials provided
by University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Note: Content may be edited for
style and length.
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