3698160
doi
10.5281/zenodo.3698160
oai:zenodo.org:3698160
Questions Raised By the "New" Coronavirus: Too Many "Experts" ̶ Too Little Thought
Dr. Lawrence Broxmeyer, MD
New York Institute of Medical Research, USA
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
COVID-19
Coronavirus
SARS
MERS
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
CDC
Mycobacterium avium
MAC
COVID-19
2019 Coronavirus
Pandemic
Epidemic
<p>History has a tendency to repeat itself, and pandemics/epidemics are no exception. Case in point, the common ground between the present “novel” 2019 coronavirus (AKA COVID-19), the SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) and MERS (Middle East respiratory syndrome) outbreaks before that, and the Great Pandemic of 1918, long ago. The present COVID-19, did not occur in a vacuum. By December of 2018, Liu et al., proclaimed tuberculosis to be an epidemic throughout China, an epidemic which still rages on. China harbors the second largest burden of tuberculosis in the world ̶ a disease which often begins with flu-like symptoms, and a disease whose bacilli are laden with RNA bacterial viruses called mycobacteriophages. Quietly, by 2016, the World Health Organization acknowledged that despite advances, the TB bacillus, which Koch was forced to refer to as “the TB virus”, is once again the deadliest pathogen in the world. Here we compare all 4 pandemics/epidemics with some surprising results and similarities.</p>
COVID-19
Zenodo
2020-03-05
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
3698159
published article
1586212299.660081
339485
md5:282718b81f99bb217b58c4ee69ccfc38
https://zenodo.org/records/3698160/files/ZENODO CORONAVIRUS SRPRRC-03-00026-2.pdf
public
10.5281/zenodo.3698159
isVersionOf
doi
Pulmonary Research and Respiratory Care
3
1
1-8
2020-03-05