COVID-19 Coronavirus: Outbreak, Pandemic, Epidemic?

How semantics are vital to the telling of the story of a disease

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How semantics are vital to the telling of the story of a disease

What was deemed an unusual pneumonia in Wuhan, China, has now accelerated into the rapidly expanding COVID-19  (Coronavirus disease 2019) outbreak across the world. Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General, World Health Organization (WHO) has stated that the WHO will “not hesitate to describe this as a pandemic”, but steering clear of designating the disease as one, brings us to how semantics are vital to the telling of the story of a disease. Though classification does not change the facts on the ground, it can stem public panic and impact strategy: For instance, classifying a disease as an epidemic or a pandemic could invite travel restrictions, affecting trade and economy. This brings us to how the severity of the spread of diseases is determined and classified.

Outbreak

When the number of cases of a particular disease is greater than expected in a community, in a defined area, it is called an outbreak. For example, if there is a sudden spurt in the number of dengue cases in a particular area, it is termed an outbreak.

The sudden occurrence of a disease, which has not been experienced earlier by a community, is also termed an outbreak, even if there is only a single case of that disease. Generally affecting a smaller geographical region such as a district or a city, the term outbreak can also be employed to refer to a larger region in case of infections that have never been sighted before.

The COVID-19 started as an outbreak in the port city of Wuhan, in the central Hubei province of China. Initially suspected to be an outbreak of pneumonia , it was finally identified as a new virus on 7 January 2019.

Epidemic

An epidemic is the instance of a large-scale occurrence of a group of illnesses that are of a similar nature and stem from a common source, in overwhelming numbers across a community, a region or country. The geographical reac...

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