WHO stresses need to find source of coronavirus
FILE â This undated electron microscope image made available by the U.S. National Institutes of Health in February 2020 shows the Novel Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, the virus causes COVID-19. (NIAID-RML via AP)
Pinning down the source of the coronavirus pandemic should help in working out how COVID-19 has âinvaded the human speciesâ so quickly, a senior WHO official told AFP.
The outbreak has triggered a fierce diplomatic spat between China and the United States â with the World Health Organization at the center of the row.
In late March, US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping struck an informal truce in the war of words over the origin of the deadly disease.
But it quickly broke down. Trump has been accusing Beijing of being slow to alert the world to the initial outbreak in Wuhan, and openly suspects China of covering up an accident at the eastern cityâs virology lab.
Far from the cross-Pacific spat, Sylvie Briand, the WHOâs director of infectious hazard management, said it was crucial to know the origin of the virus âto understand how it has evolvedâ.
âIt is a virus of animal origin transmitted to humans. And so we have to try to understand how the adaptation of this virus allowed it to invade the human species,â she told AFP outside the WHOâs headquarters in Geneva.
Virus âping-pongâ
The first cases of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the COVID-19 disease, were reported in late December in Wuhan.
Since then, the pandemic has infected more than four million people worldwide and claimed nearly 300,000 lives.
Many researchers believe the new coronavirus came from bats, but passed through another species before being transmitted to humans.
âThe virus multiplied in these animals, changed a little in doing so and finally resulted in a type of virusâ that is transmissible to human beings, said Briand, who in 2009 headed the WHOâs influenza program during the 2009 H1N1 âswine fluâ pandemic.
Retracing the origin of the virus, by discovering the intermediate hosts, would âprevent the phenomenon from happening again â and avoid ping-pongâ transmission between humans and animals.
âEvery time it jumps from one species to another, the virus can mutate a bit,â the French scientist said.
âThat can have an impact on treatments â it can become resistant â while vaccines may no longer be effective enough.â
For now, there are still many unknowns, despite âthousands and thousands of samplesâ having been taken, notably from âmany animals in the market in Wuhanâ â but also from dogs in Hong Kong, said Briand, stressing that the analysis will take time.
The samples are taken by WHO member states but the United Nationsâ health agency âencourages them to share information with each otherâ in order to speed up research.
Changing the alert system
The United States and Australia have called for an international probe into the origin of the virus.
More diplomatically, the WHO has called on Beijing to invite them in to investigate the source.
Shortly afterwards in early May, China proposed setting up a commission under the auspices of the WHO to assess the âglobal responseâ to COVID-19 â and only once the pandemic is over.
The Chinese authorities insist that the plan should be signed off in advance by the WHOâs World Health Assembly or its executive board â the two main bodies of the UN agency, which host their annual meetings next week.
Briand said the gatherings should also focus on the need to ârefineâ the WHOâs health alert system, which only allows the organization to declare whether there is a global emergency or not â while the previous procedure had six stages, with the last being declaring a pandemic.
âWe need to find a system that can trigger alerts so that people can get ready,â she said.
âBut at the same time we have to tell them whether it is imminent or if itâs coming in a few weeks or months, and tell them more precisely what it is they need to be prepared for.â
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