COVID-19 in China was not spread through laboratory leak says WHO report
Coronavirus most likely transmitted from bats to humans through other animals revealed the leaked WHO report
A leaked WHO
report has revealed that COVID-19 virus was likely transmitted from bats to
humans through other animals. A joint WHO-China study on the origins of
COVID-19 says that transmission of the virus from bats to humans through
another animal is the most likely scenario and that a lab leak is “extremely
unlikely.” The Associated Press (AP) has claimed to obtain the leaked document.
The findings
were largely as expected and left many questions unanswered, but the report
provided in-depth detail on the reasoning behind the team’s conclusions. The
researchers proposed further research in every area except the lab leak
hypothesis.
The
researchers listed four scenarios in order of likelihood for the emergence of
the virus named SARS-CoV-2. Topping the list was transmission through a second
animal, which they said was likely to very likely. They evaluated direct spread
from bats to humans as likely, and said that spread through “cold-chain” food
products was possible but not likely.
It said
highly similar viruses have been found in pangolins, but also noted that mink
and cats are susceptible to the COVID virus, which suggests they could be
carriers.
The report
is based largely on a visit by a WHO team of international experts to Wuhan,
the Chinese city where COVID-19 was first detected, from mid-January to
mid-February.
The
discovery of other cases before the Huanan market outbreak suggests it may have
started elsewhere. But the report notes there could have been milder cases that
went undetected and that could be a link between the market and earlier cases.
“No firm
conclusion therefore about the role of the Huanan market in the origin of the
outbreak, or how the infection was introduced into the market, can currently be
drawn,” the report says.
The report
said that the cold chain, as it is known, can be a driver of long-distance
virus spread but was skeptical it could have triggered the outbreak. The report
says the risk is lower than through human-to-human respiratory infection, and
most experts agree.
“While there
is some evidence for possible reintroduction of SARS-CoV-2 through handling of
imported contaminated frozen products in China since the initial pandemic wave,
this would be extraordinary in 2019 where the virus was not widely
circulating,” the study said.
The official
release of report has been delayed several times. A World Health Organization
official said late last week that he expected it would be ready for release “in
the next few days.” Peter Ben Embarek, the WHO expert who led the Wuhan
mission, said Friday that the report had been finalized and was being
fact-checked and translated.
“I expect
that in the next few days, that whole process will be completed and we will be
able to release it publicly,” he said. The draft report is inconclusive on
whether the outbreak started at a Wuhan seafood market that had one of the
earliest clusters of cases in December 2019.
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