From the BBC:
“Coronavirus disease named
Covid-19”
The World Health Organization
says the official name for the disease caused by the new coronavirus is
Covid-19. "We now have a name for
the disease and it's Covid-19," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told
reporters in Geneva. It comes after the
death toll from the virus passed 1,000. Tens of thousands of people have been
infected. Dr Ghebreyesus called on the world to fight the new virus as
aggressively as possible. The word coronavirus refers to the group of viruses
it belongs to, rather than the latest strain. The virus itself has been designated
SARS-CoV-2 by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses. Researchers
have been calling for an official name to avoid confusion and stigmatisation of
any group or country. "We had to
find a name that did not refer to a geographical location, an animal, an
individual or group of people, and which is also pronounceable and related to
the disease," the WHO chief said. "Having a name matters to prevent
the use of other names that can be inaccurate or stigmatising. It also gives us
a standard format to use for any future coronavirus outbreaks." The new
name is taken from the words "corona", "virus" and
"disease", with 2019 representing the year that it emerged (the
outbreak was reported to the WHO on 31 December). There are now more than
42,200 confirmed cases across China. The number of deaths has overtaken that of
the Sars epidemic in 2002-2003. On Monday, some 103 people died in Hubei
province alone, a daily record, and the national death toll is now 1,016. But
the number of new infections nationally was down almost 20% from the day
before, from 3,062 to 2,478. In recent days, Chinese authorities have
increasingly been criticised for their handling of the crisis when the cases
first emerged. The death of a doctor
whose early warnings were suppressed by authorities sparked widespread public
anger. Beijing has now "removed" several senior officials over their
actions to control the disease. The party secretary for the Hubei Health
Commission, and the head of the commission, were among those who lost their
jobs. They are the most senior officials to be demoted so far. The central
government has also sent a team from its highest anti-corruption agency to
Hubei to investigate the treatment of Dr Li by police. Scientists from around
the world are meeting in Geneva to discuss ways to combat the outbreak. Dr
Ghebreyesus of the WHO said there was still a realistic chance of containing
the disease if enough resources were devoted to the fight. He praised the
measures being taken in China, which he said were "slowing the spread to
the rest of the world". The US Federal Reserve meanwhile has warned that
disruption to the Chinese economy could spill over and affect the rest of the
world.
^ It took over a month for the virus causing
those deadly outbreak to even get name. That shows just have slow everything
has been with this outbreak (from China’s response to the WHO’s sending teams
to team with the hundreds of deaths and thousands upon thousands of infected.) It’s
clear China, the WHO and many places around the world weren’t prepared for a
sudden outbreak like Convid 19 has become, but they really should have been. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-51466362
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