1. SEVERE ACUTE RESPIRATORY SYNDROME (SARS): A Year in Review.
- Author
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Skowronski, Danuta M., Astell, Caroline, Brunham, Robert C., Low, Donald E., Partric, Martin, Roper, Rachel L., Talbot, Pierre J., Tam, Theresa, and abiuk, Lorne
- Subjects
SARS disease ,RESPIRATORY diseases ,ETIOLOGY of diseases ,PUBLIC health ,GENOMES - Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) emerged from China as an untreatable and rapidly spreading respiratory illness of unknown etiology. Following point source exposure in February 2003, more than a dozen guests infected at a Hog Kong hotel seeded multi-country outbreaks that persisted through the spring of 2003. The World Health Organization responded by invoking traditional public health mea- suers and advanced technologies to control the illness and contain the cause. A novel coronavirus was implicated and its entire genome was sequenced by mid-April 2003. The urgency of responding to this threat focused scientific endeavor and stimulated global collaboration. Through real-time application of accumulating knowledge, the world proved capable of arresting the first pandemic threat of the twenty-first century, despite early respiratory-borne spread and global susceptibility. This review synthesizes lessons learned from this remarkable achievement. These lessons can be applied to re-emergence of SARS or to the next pandemic threat to arise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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