
The entire city of Wuhan in Central China has been placed into lockdown. Major public Lunar New Year holiday celebrations have been cancelled, transport networks — including flights, buses, ferries, trains — have been frozen, and its 11 million residents urged not to leave the city.
Wuhan is the source of an outbreak of novel coronavirus, which has so far infected more than 550 people and claimed 17 lives.
Health workers have been deployed to transport hubs across the country, measuring incoming passengers’ body temperature for any signs of fever. And with cases cropping up overseas, international health agencies are now also on high alert.
But what exactly is the virus? And should Australians be worried?
Mamamia‘s daily news podcast, The Quicky, spoke to experts to help break it down, including infectious disease specialist, Dr Sanjaya Senanayake, Professor of Medicine at Canberra’s Australian National University, and Dr Matt Killingsworth, Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Tasmania.
What is coronavirus?
Coronaviruses are nothing new. They’re actually a big family of viruses that occur mostly in animals and are responsible for a number of common illnesses. However, certain strains can mutate, be transmitted to people and then spread person-to-person.
Another example of a human coronavirus was SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome). SARS originated in China in 2002 and, over the course of several months, spread to two dozen countries, infected at least 8000 people and led to 774 deaths.