{"id":7558,"date":"2020-03-02T13:19:09","date_gmt":"2020-03-02T02:19:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/coffeeobsession.com.au\/?p=4588"},"modified":"2023-10-20T05:03:23","modified_gmt":"2023-10-20T05:03:23","slug":"are-travel-bans-working-to-control-the-coronavirus-outside-china-and-how-concerned-should-you-be","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/absoluteimmigration.com\/news\/are-travel-bans-working-to-control-the-coronavirus-outside-china-and-how-concerned-should-you-be","title":{"rendered":"Are travel bans working to control the Coronavirus outside China and how concerned should you be?"},"content":{"rendered":"
As the numbers of known coronavirus cases around the world continue to sharply increase, countries are enforcing travel restrictions, sealing off towns to prevent local transmission, and in some cases suspending public transport and cancelling sporting matches. So how worried should you be and how far and for how long with the coronavirus spread?<\/p>\n
While the\u00a0World Health Organization (WHO)<\/a>\u00a0is yet to declare the coronavirus (COVID-19) a pandemic, which they define as \u201cthe worldwide spread of a new disease\u201d, the former chair of the Global Health Council and global health expert Jonathan D Quick, suggests that\u00a0the worst-case scenario for the coronavirus is likely to occur<\/a>.<\/p>\n From what we know at the moment, the coronavirus kills roughly 2% of those afflicted<\/a>. This isn\u2019t as high a death rate as some other viruses like\u00a0Ebola which had an average death rate of 50%<\/a>, however the coronavirus spread at a much faster rate than many other viruses.<\/p>\n The number of undetected cases passing across borders has highlighted the imperfect nature of travel restrictions and disease screening, but if we don\u2019t enforce travel restrictions what else can we do to stop the virus spreading?<\/p>\n Unfortunately no matter how hard you try, borders are leaky when it comes to viruses. It\u2019s made more difficult when viruses take a number of days before people start to show symptoms. In the case of coronavirus it\u2019s about 5 days before you may see symptoms but patients are contagious before these symptoms appear. This means people may spread the virus before knowing they have it. The mild nature of symptoms relating to the coronavirus also make detection more difficult. People are unaware of the severity of their illness and take longer to recognise their illness as the coronavirus.\u00a0Other viruses like Ebola or SARS both had more severe symptoms making detection easier<\/a>, they were also not as easily transmitted between people allowing the viruses to be brought under control relatively quickly in comparison.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Reported cases of coronavirus by country (numbers of cases of coronavirus as reported in NY Times, 2 March 2020,\u00a0https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/interactive\/2020\/world\/coronavirus-maps.html<\/a>).<\/p>\nTiming<\/h3>\n