Coronavirus and India: FAQ of What We Know So Far

What is the novel coronavirus?

The novel coronavirus, as the name suggests, is a new strain of coronavirus. Coronaviruses are types of viruses whose surfaces are dotted by crown-like structures, visible under a microscope.

The first case of the novel coronavirus was reported from China, and the infection was likely contracted in early December 2019. The viruses that cause infectious disease outbreaks typically jump from an animal to a human, thanks to a new mutation, after which they circulate among humans for as long as transmission remains sustainable.

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We still don’t know which animal, or animals, the new coronavirus came from but scientists suspect based on genetic studies that snakes and civets were involved in the transmission chain.

Is the virus ‘natural’ or was it bio-engineered?

It is extremely unlikely that the virus was bio-engineered or synthesised, and extremely likely to be of natural origin.

It is a zoonotic virus, which means it spread from non-humans to humans. Perhaps the most famous zoonotic disease among humans is AIDS, caused by the human immunodeficiency virus that ‘jumped’ from primates in Africa to humans in the first half of the 20th century.

What are the symptoms?

The symptoms of a novel coronavirus infection, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), are:

Two to 14 days after exposure