Opinion | What the world learned from Sars stands us in good stead to curb Covid-19
- Far from a gloomy observation, the fact Covid-19 behaves like Sars should give us hope. After all, we now know about how coronavirus infections cluster, where the hotspots are, and what public health measures are likely to prove effective
With a climbing death toll and infections diffusing through the continent, Covid-19 takes on new meaning as it reopens the scars left by the severe acute respiratory syndrome, parallels that pundits have been eager to point out.
First, we can observe how and where respiratory viral epidemics are most likely to be transmitted. Sars revolutionised how we thought coronaviruses spread. Where before, our models assumed that everyone had an equal chance of getting infected, Sars showed that people have vastly unequal chances of infection because comparable coronaviruses tended to cluster.
The clustering patterns debunked the widespread myth that person-to-person contact on the streets was actually the most likely form of transmission. Disease transmission and contact rates are disproportionately higher in specific types of sites than anywhere else.