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SARS Timeline

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SARS Timeline Nov 16 02 Feb 11 03 Feb 28 March 11 March 12 March 19 March 27 April 5 April 9 April 14 April 17 April 28 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SARS Timeline


1
SARS Timeline
  • Nov 16 02 Feb 11 03 Feb 28 March 11
    March 12 March 19 March 27 April 5
    April 9 April 14 April 17 April 28
  • First cases Hong Kong
    WHO Sequence
  • retrospectively and Vietnam
    issues of suspected
  • Recognized, report
    out- travel
    agent, a
  • Guangdong, breaks
    in advisories
    coronavirus,
  • China hospital
    established
  • workers China
  • Acute coverup India
  • respiratory WHO
    admitted
  • reported in issues
    SARS SARS Guangdong
    global made top
  • by China alert
    priority Vietnam
  • MOH contain-
  • Reported First ing virus
  • First in U.S. and SARS in
    (WHO)
  • SARS Europe Africa
  • case
  • Vietnam

2
Case Distribution of SARS Worldwide
ERSI, May 2003
3
ERSI, May 2003
4
Effect of Travel and Missed Cases on the SARS
Epidemic Spread from Hotel M, Hong Kong
5
SARS Hotspots (as of May 28, 2003)
  • Probable Cases Deaths
  • China 5322 321
  • Hong Kong 1728 269
  • Taiwan 596 76
  • Singapore 206 31
  • Canada 148 26
  • United States 65 0
  • Vietnam 63 5
  • Philippines 12 2
  • Other Countries 62 4
  • Total 8202 734

6
Number of SARS Cases Reported over Time (China)

7
Symptoms of SARS
  • Cough
  • High fever
  • Severe pneumonia
  • Difficult to distinguish from other respiratory
    diseases in early stages

8
Incidence Difference across Different Age Groups
(China)
(1/1,000,000)
CDC, 2003
9
Fatality Rates of Different Age Groups
CDC, 2003
10
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11
Etiology
12
SARS DiagnosticsKey Messages
  • SARS diagnostic assays are sensitive and
    specific, but may not provide definitive
    diagnosis early in the illness
  • Changes in the quantity, type, and timing of
    specimens collected may improve detection of
    SARS-CoV infection
  • Rapid and accurate diagnosis of other respiratory
    pathogens associated with SARS-like illness may
    help rule out SARS-CoV infection and calm public
    fears
  • Interpretation of test results must take into
    consideration possibility of false positives and
    negatives a clear strategy to minimize such
    possibilities and to confirm test results are
    essential

CDC, 2003
13
Peiris personal communication
14
  • Prevention of SARS

15
(No Transcript)
16
Definitions of Quarantine
  • Isolation
  • Separation and restricted movement of ill persons
    with contagious disease
  • Often in a hospital setting
  • Primarily individual level, may be populations
  • Quarantine
  • Separation and restricted movement of well
    persons presumed exposed to contagion
  • Often at home, may be designated residential
    facility
  • Applied at the individual or community level
  • May be voluntary or mandatory

CDC, 2003
17
Modern Quarantine
A collective action for the common good
predicated on aiding individuals infected or
exposed to infectious agents while protecting
others from the dangers of inadvertent exposure
Public good
Civil liberties
Meeting needs of individuals infected and exposed
is paramount
CDC, 2003
18
Key Issues to Consider
  • Surveillance
  • Clinical evaluation
  • Infection control measures
  • Patient isolation
  • Engineering controls
  • Exposure evaluation
  • Staffing needs and personnel policies
  • Access controls
  • Supplies and equipment
  • Communication

CDC, 2003
19
SARS Mysteries
  • Origin of SARS animal reservoirs?
  • Is coronavirus the etiologic agent?
  • Cases without antibody
  • Non-cases with antibody

20
SARS Mysteries (continued)
  • What proportion of exposed persons
  • develop clinical disease and death?
  • Proportion of exposed, infected and asymptomatic
  • Are there asymptomatic carriers?
  • Reports of cases without known source of exposure

21
SARS Mysteries (continued)
  • What causes super shedders?
  • Host characteristics e.g., age
  • Agent characteristics virulent strain
  • Is pathology caused by the virus or the
  • response to the virus?
  • AIDS patients appear to be resistant to SARS

22
SARS Mysteries (continued)
  • Will SARS reappear in the fall?
  • SARS is transmitted through the respiratory
    route. These diseases, like influenza, tend to
    have a season cycle with resurgence in the late
    fall, winter and early spring

23
Will SARS Re-emerge?
  • Potential sources of re-emergence
  • Animal reservoir
  • Humans with persistent infection
  • Unrecognized transmission in humans
  • Laboratory exposure
  • SARS most likely to recur outside U.S.
  • Well-established global surveillance is important
    to recognition of first case
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