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Global Times reports on a sinister new zoonotic disease in China that originates in shrews. Langya henipavirus was first spotted in 2018. Since then it has infected 35 people, and North Korea has just gone on ‘high alert’ as a result, fearing another pandemic.
The virus was first found in China's Shandong and Henan areas, discovered in throat swab samples taken from feverish patients in eastern China who’d had a recent close contact with wild animals. The experts who carried out the research say the symptoms of the new viral disease include fever, fatigue, cough, anorexia, headache, nausea, and vomiting, all suffered by 26 out of the 35 patients.
This is a biosafety level 4 virus with a 40-75% fatality rate
Zoonosis means an infectious disease that jumps from animals to humans. Henipavirus is one of the most worrying emerging causes of zoonosis in the Asia-Pacific region. The Hendra virus (HeV) and Nipah virus (NiV) come from the same genus, both originating in fruit bats. Henipavirusis known to cause severe illness in animals and humans, classified as ‘biosafety Level 4’ viruses with horribly high fatality rates of 40% to 75%, according to the World Health Organization. It’s a lot higher than the covid fatality rate, and there’s no vaccine and no treatment. All medics can do is manage your symptoms.
No need to panic... yet
So far the Langya henipavirus cases in China haven’t been that serious. Nobody has died. But experts say there’s cause for concern since so many viruses have totally unpredictable results when they infect humans. It’s also good to know there hasn’t been any proven human-to-human transmission of the virus yet, although some reports suggest it can spread from person to person.
As Wang Xinyu, Deputy Chief Physician at the department of Infectious Diseases of Huashan Hospital said,
"Coronavirus will not be the last infectious disease to cause a pandemic worldwide, as new infectious diseases will have an increasingly greater impact on human daily life. It is important to stress that the scope of this type of disease should not be limited to human diseases, but should be looked at in a larger context.”
In other words, the human race must sustainably balance and optimise the health of people, animals and ecosystems, or nasty new viruses will just keep on coming.
The zoonotic virus risk
70% of the world’s emerging infectious diseases have probably passed to people via contact with animals. As the human population grows, the risk increases. Take China, which has suffered outbreaks of SARS in 2002-2003 as well as covid, both probably originating in bats. So far covid has killed over 6.4 million of us. No wonder it’s so important to identify novel viruses quickly, and share the information about potential risks immediately and widely.
Scientists say more work is needed to understand the Langya virus, which might already have found its way outside China. There are key questions around just how widespread the new virus is in nature, how it’s getting into people, and exactly how dangerous it is. We don’t even know whether it can continue to jump from animals to humans.
So far the geographical spread of the new virus suggests the infection risk is ‘rather widespread’, according to the virologist Malik Peiris from the University of Hong Kong. As you can imagine it’s vitally important to pin down the virus’s geographical range in humans, and in the shrews it comes from.
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