Principles of Virology, Volume 2. S. Jane Flint

Principles of Virology, Volume 2 - S. Jane Flint


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care workers on site, who provided care for the victims and potential victims (Fig. 1.7). The Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), which received the 1999 Nobel Peace Prize for its work throughout the developing world, provided much of this frontline care. In late 2014, at the peak of the epidemic, physicians and support personnel were exhausted, hospitals had little room for new patients, and lack of adequate resources forced heartbreaking choices on those doctors: provide optimal care to a few or substandard care to many. To care for the victims, medical personnel put themselves in extreme danger: despite protective gear, approximately 10% of Ebola virus fatalities occurred in health care workers. Lack of running water, oppressive temperatures, and outdated sup plies were all likely contributors.

      Eventually, border closings, mandatory quarantines, and public education that led to changes in burial practices slowed the spread of the epidemic. In December 2016, the WHO announced, after a two-year trial, that a recombinant vaccine appeared to offer protection from the Zaire strain of Ebola responsible for the West Africa outbreak (Chapters 7 and 9).

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      Though the impact of the virus abated, epidemics have long-lasting economic ramifications: it has been estimated that the financial toll of this epidemic exceeded $1.6 billion, accelerating poverty, which, as estimated by one news organization, likely caused as many deaths as the outbreak itself.

      As the Ebola outbreak was resolving in Africa in 2015, a new viral epidemic was beginning in South America. The first confirmed case of Zika virus infection in the Americas was reported in northeast Brazil in May 2015, although phylogenetic studies indicated that the virus had been introduced as early as 2013.

      The stories above highlight some of the unique challenges, uncertainty, and urgency that face epidemiologists during an outbreak. The study of viruses can be likened to a set of con centric circles. The center comprises detailed analyses at the molecular level of the genome and the structures of viral particles and proteins that are crucial to understanding viral re production, and the biochemical consequences of interactions of viral and host cell proteins. How infection of individual cells affects the tissue in which the infected cells reside, and how that impacted tissue disturbs the biology of the host, de fine the landscape of the field of viral pathogenesis, in the next level (discussed in the following four chapters). But if a viral population is to survive, transmission must occur from an infected host to susceptible, uninfected ones. The study of infections of populations is the discipline of epidemiology, the cornerstone of public health research and response. Within this broad, outer circle, major areas of epidemiological research include outbreak investigation, disease transmission, surveillance, screening, biomonitoring, and public education.

       Incidence versus Prevalence

      Determining the number of infected individuals in a population is a primary goal of epidemiological studies. This information is required to establish both the incidence and the prevalence of infection. Incidence is defined as the number of new cases within a population in a specified period. Some epidemiologists use this term to determine the number of new cases in a community during a particular period, while others use incidence to indicate the number of new disease cases per unit of population per period. For example, the incidence of influenza can be stated as the number of reported cases in New York City per year or the number of new cases/1,000 people/year. Disease prevalence, on the other hand, is a measure of the number of infected individuals at one moment in time divided by an appropriate measure of the population.


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