SARS or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome was a virus that began in the Guangdong Province in China in 2002 and spread to more than 35 countries before it was finished. At first, the medical community was completely taken off guard because this was a virus, the coronavirus (WHO, 2003b), that they had never seen before. A report from the WHO dated April 11, 2003 said that
"This appears to be the first severe and easily transmissible new disease to emerge in the 21st century. Though much about the disease remains poorly understood, including the exact identity of the causative virus, we do know that it has features that allow it to spread rapidly along international air travel routes."
The outbreak was sudden and the disease seemed tailor made for the present tide of global travel. Once SARS reached a major destination such as Hong King, as it did in the Spring of 2003, it quickly spread throughout the world,
The epidemiology of the outbreak determined that it had originated in China's Guangdong Province and that it had been first recorded in November of 2002 (WHO, 2003a). One of the main issues that healthcare workers had with the disease was that it seemed to be one that attacked young adults, mostly those in the same age range as the healthcare workers themselves. This was a warning flag for the workers who were exposed to SARS. Very few cases were reported in the most vulnerable populations that would normally be the ones afflicted with the influenza-like virus.
The epidemiology of the outbreak was further solidified as new cases began to arise in other Asian destinations and then in North America. Hong Kong had the second highest number of cases after Guangdong with 998 cases. The one positive sign, if it could be called that was the fact that death tolls from the disease remained relatively low as only 30 people died in Hong Kong. Viet Nam reported four deaths because the country had been forewarned of the outbreak and was able to implement health regulations that saved many of the people, and Singapore saw nine deaths of the...
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