HEALTH Doctors sound alarm as deadly tick-borne virus re-emerges in China, kills 7 so far

Burrito

Veteran Member
Good grief....
Doctors sound alarm as deadly tick-borne virus re-emerges in China, kills 7 so far


As if Covid-19 wasn’t enough, Chinese doctors are warning that the country’s population is threatened by yet another virus. The infection is passed by tick bites, but could also be transmitted between humans, experts say.
The SFTS virus has already infected around 60 people this year in China’s eastern Jiangsu and Anhui Provinces, and seven of them have died.

Symptoms of the potentially deadly infection include fever, cough, fatigue, nausea, and vomiting, as well as a decline in white blood cells.

SFTS isn’t exactly new, as the first cases of the tick-borne disease were reported in rural parts of the Hubei and Henan provinces back in 2009, and Chinese virologists isolated its pathogen in 2011.

The current case fatality rate of the re-emerging disease is between approximately 16 and 30 percent, according to the China Information System for Disease Control and Prevention.

While the infection is primarily transmitted through tick bites, transition between humans cannot be excluded, Sheng Jifang, a doctor from a hospital under Zhejiang University, told the Global Times, explaining that it could be passed through blood or mucous.

A 2015 outbreak of the same virus in Japan and South Korea had a mortality rate of more than 30 percent in both countries. The virus is known to be particularly harmful for older or immunocompromised people.

The doctors also warn that tick bites are a major transmission route not only for SFTS, but other infections as well. They say there is no reason to panic, however, if people exercise caution.

In 2018, the World Health Organization included SFTS on its list of the diseases prioritized for research together with the likes of Ebola, SARS and Zika. Those viruses were singled out due to their high potential to cause a public health emergency and lack of efficacious drugs or vaccines against them.

In December, China’s Wuhan became the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak, with the disease quickly spreading around the globe, infecting 19 million and killing more than 719,000.
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
Can we just NUKE the ENTIRE country and save the planet at the same time!! Geeeez it's like the place is a disease CESSPOOL!!
not-again-ad89f5d70e.jpg


Oh-boy-here-we-go.jpg
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
How is this tied with Ebola?

What makes this different from Lyme disease, from Tick bites?
Exactly!

Hmm. Weird, unless it has to do with the white blood cells ....wait, no , that doesn’t make sense either.... my brain is trying to wrap around “something “
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
It's a virus with 30% mortality rate, and spreads between humans without ticks.

Are you sure about transmission?

transition between humans cannot be excluded, Sheng Jifang, a doctor from a hospital under Zhejiang University, told the Global Times, explaining that it could be passed through blood or mucous.

I dunno a lot of if's & maybe's
 

psychgirl

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I think if they’re talking about it, and even IF they use those “maybes and dunno” words it’s definitely a thing...throwing out the subtle warnings...that’s how they roll.
 

helen

Panic Sex Lady
Are you sure about transmission?

transition between humans cannot be excluded, Sheng Jifang, a doctor from a hospital under Zhejiang University, told the Global Times, explaining that it could be passed through blood or mucous.

I dunno a lot of if's & maybe's

It's a virus. Sounds like it can spread through sex and dirty needles, like hepatitis.

If you look at the other outbreaks mentioned in the article, ticks are not noted to be the sole source.
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
It's a virus. Sounds like it can spread through sex and dirty needles, like hepatitis.

If you look at the other outbreaks mentioned in the article, ticks are not noted to be the sole source.


Oh so it's like the Flu, eh? Maybe they can use some blood disinfecting process? Something like dialysis?
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Are you sure about transmission?

transition between humans cannot be excluded, Sheng Jifang, a doctor from a hospital under Zhejiang University, told the Global Times, explaining that it could be passed through blood or mucous.

I dunno a lot of if's & maybe's
True, but that 30% mortality rate is concerning!

Summerthyme
 

Burrito

Veteran Member
How is this tied with Ebola?

What makes this different from Lyme disease, from Tick bites?

Isn't this from a questionable website per TB2K rules?
What would you have me title it as? (Edit to add I changed it to Health. my bad) I thought Ebola was the closest thing. And no, it is not from a site on the TB2K list. Yes the site is obviously sponsored in part by the Russian gov., but the stuff posted is real news albeit with a pro-Russian slant.
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
ticks, skeeters what the hell is their point. I've been around west nile since it was invented.

God is good all the time

Judy
 

Sacajawea

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Hey, if some virus doesn't get ya - ya might get hit by a bus. Or a meteor.
This whole freak out thing over death - which is an integral part of life - is starting to bug the crap outta me. SURE, take prudent precautions... but trust me, the world isn't going to come to an end because I - or someone else - gets sick, or even dies.

NO ONE AND NOTHING is going to make it so you live forever. NO ONE GETS OUT ALIVE.

Jeez....
 

Double_A

TB Fanatic
True, but that 30% mortality rate is concerning!

Summerthyme

At 30% it is of concern. However typically diseases with that high of a mortality rate burn themselves out. Infected die so often the spread rate is low. There is a... well hate to use this phrase, but a "Sweet Spot" in terms of lethality. Books on Bio-Warfare usually do a much better job of explaining than I have.
 

Kayak

Adrenaline Junkie
Well, on the positive side, looks like Ivermectin might help with this as well, so one drug, two diseases. Maybe.

(We use ivermectin on two of the dogs for worms, the dog that didn't get it came inside with more ticks than the other two, so now we're giving it to all three.)
 
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