China's coronavirus quarantine like using an 'atomic bomb' to deal with outbreak, expert says - Action News
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China's coronavirus quarantine like using an 'atomic bomb' to deal with outbreak, expert says

While China'sresponse tothe new coronavirusoutbreak is being praised in comparison to its handling of the SARS epidemic, some are suggesting officials may have gone too far by ordering a quarantine of the city ofWuhan.

Experts say Wuhan quarantine may do more harm than good, advise better screening

People wearing face masks select vegetables at a supermarket, as the country is hit by an outbreak of the new coronavirus, in Beijing. (Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters)

While China'sresponse tothe new coronavirusoutbreak is being praised in comparison to its handling of the SARS epidemic, some are suggesting officials may have gone too far by ordering a quarantine of the city ofWuhan.

Meanwhile, reports that the viruscan spread before symptoms are evident making it much more difficult to containmeans the international community must beef up its screening process at airports, says one leading expert in infectious diseases.

The latest figures reported Sunday reveal more than 2,700infections.Canada has announced its first two presumptivecases a man in his 50s, who was in Wuhan before flying to Toronto, and his wife.

The U.S. has confirmed cases in Washington state, Chicago, Southern California and Arizona. And smallnumbers of cases have been found in Thailand, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, Nepal, France and Australia. But nearly all the cases come from China.

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The epidemic has revived memories of the SARS outbreak that originated in China and killed nearly 800 as it spread around the world in 2002 and 2003. But the response this time,in terms of information sharing, is being hailed as a significant improvement.

'Response is vastly different'

"Theirresponse is vastly different to this virus compared to its response to SARS almost 20 years ago,when they were somewhat secretive about their data," said Aileen Marty, a professor of infectious diseases at the Florida International University. "They are openly sharing their data."

As for their public health response, they have obviously taken "extreme measures" byplanning to build new hospitals within weeks and quarantine millions of people in Wuhan, said Kristian Andersen,director of infectious disease genomics at the Scripps Research Translational Institute.

Wuhan, the city at the centre of the crisis, remains on lockdown with no flights, trains or buses in or out.

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China has been taking aggressive action to prevent further spread of the coronavirus by starting to lock down areas that have been affected.

Howard Markel, director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the University of Michigan, andauthor of Quarantine!and When Germs Travel, believesChinese officials maybe doing more harm than good with these actions.

"Having spent my medical and academic career studying these issues, I am astounded by what is already the single largest quarantine in recorded history," Markel wrote in an op-ed piece for The Washington Post.

"As a historian of quarantines and epidemics one who has read, seen or written similar sad stories too many times I am not terribly optimistic it will turn out well."

People wear masks as a precaution due to the coronavirus outbreak as they wait for the arrivals at the international terminal at Toronto's Pearson International Airport in Toronto on Saturday, Jan. 25, 2020. Canadian health officials have announced the country's first two presumed cases a man who travelled to Wuhan in China and his wife. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

In an interview with CBC News, Markel said that making such a decision is incredibly difficult, as officials don'twantto reacttoo early or too late. Still, he said,he wouldn'tnecessarily haveclosedoffor lockeddown citiesbecause the very word "quarantine" causes panic.

"It does prevent the movement of goods in and out of those places food, water, medicines, health-carepeople."

As well,ultimately, the fatality rates may reveal that the deaths caused by the virus aren't that much greater than thosecaused by the seasonal flu.

"You don't quarantinefor seasonal flu because it's so draconian and it's so disruptive," he said."This is like an atomic bomb for health options."

Unprecedented scale

Dr. IsaacBogoch,an infectious disease physician at Toronto General Hospital, agreed that the scale in which the quarantine has been implemented isunprecedented.

"What it tells me and what it tells the global community is that clearly ... senior officials are recognizing this as a major problem within China. And that they will go to any result, they will go to all ends to get this under control," he said.

"Whether or not this will be effective is one of the bigger questions. People have these very strong opinions saying, you know, 'well, travel bans have never worked in the past.' And I don't disagree with that one bit. Butin the same sentence, we've never seen a travel ban like this ever implemented before."

Tom Inglesby, director of the Center for Health Security at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health,tweeted that he had"serious concern that large scale quarantine for nCoV will be ineffective and could have big negative consequences."

He said such quarantines could hurt diagnosis and isolation efforts, make people less confident in the overall response and less likely to want to self report their illness.

But Marty, who spent 31 days in Nigeria leading aninternationalteam helping to combat the Ebola outbreak,said what's more alarming to her is the fact that new studies have revealed people are spreading the virus before they manifest symptoms.

"Somebody who doesn't know that they're exposed and is not symptomatic, looks and feels great, mayalready be shedding virus to their neighbours," she said.

What that means for the international community, she said, is a more robust screening process at airports.

Airports in several countries are already using scanners to take the temperature of passengers arriving from China.

But Marty said it's more important to ask questions ofpassengers.

"What we have to do is the other things we do at point of entries, which is, talk to [the passengers]. 'Where have you been? Who have you been with?' Because that's our best clue you may be an at-risk person," Marty said.

"And theneach country has to instigate measuresto follow people whose answers are concerning.And one thing we're not yet doing ... we needtoscreen every airport that has direct flights from China."

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'Masks don't protect you from getting this infection all that well,' says Dr. Isaac Bogoch.

With files from The Associated Press, Reuters