Selasa, 09 Februari 2021

Covid-19 may have circulated elsewhere before Wuhan discovery, lab leak unlikely: WHO mission - The Straits Times

WUHAN (REUTERS, AFP) - The head of the World Health Organisation-led team in the central Chinese city of Wuhan probing the origins of Covid-19 said on Tuesday (Feb 9) that cold chain transmission of the virus is a possibility and warrants further investigation.

"Cold chain" refers to the transport and trade of frozen food. China has pushed the idea that the virus can be transmitted by frozen food and has repeatedly announced findings of coronavirus traces on imported food packaging.

However, Dr Peter Ben Embarek, a WHO specialist in animal diseases who leads the independent group of experts, also said the team’s nearly month-long investigation in Wuhan had not dramatically changed the picture of the outbreak.

“We know the virus can survive in conditions that are found in these cold, frozen environments, but we don’t really understand if the virus can transmit to humans” or under which conditions, he told the briefing.

Dr Embarek said it would be worthwhile to explore whether a frozen wild animal in a market setting with the right conditions could be conducive to rapid spread of the virus.

He said that work to identify the origins of the coronavirus points to a natural reservoir in bats, but it is unlikely that they were in Wuhan, the city where the outbreak was first identified in late 2019.

He also said investigators were looking at whether the virus was circulating earlier than first thought, and that blood samples needed to be found to conduct further research.

Lab leak unlikely 

The possibility that the virus leaked from a lab – another hypothesis – was extremely unlikely and did not require further study, Dr Embarek told the briefing.

Dr Liang Wannian, an expert with China’s Health Commission, also told the press briefing that there had been no substantial spread of the virus in the city before the late 2019 outbreak.  

The investigation had not yet found the animal host responsible for transferring the virus to humans, Dr Liang said. Transmission from animals was likely but so far "the reservoir hosts remain to be identified", he added. 

The WHO team arrived in Wuhan on Jan 14 and after two weeks of quarantine, visited key sites including the Huanan seafood market, the location of the first known cluster of infections, as well as the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which has been involved in coronavirus research.


Members of the joint WHO-China mission speaking during a press conference on Feb 9. 2021. PHOTO: AFP

Members of the team have sought to rein in expectations about the mission, with zoologist Peter Daszak saying last week that one of their aims was to “identify the next steps to fill in the gaps”.

Another team member, infectious disease expert Dominic Dwyer, said it would probably take years to fully understand the origins of Covid-19.

The United States said China needed to be more open when it comes to sharing data and samples as well as allowing access to patients, medical staff and lab workers. Beijing subsequently accused Washington of politicising a scientific mission.

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2021-02-09 11:19:46Z
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