Epidemiology, causes, clinical manifestation and diagnosis, prevention and control of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) during the early outbreak period
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Date
2020
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC Infectious Diseases of Poverty
Abstract
Background:
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has been identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory
illness in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China beginning in December 2019. As of 31 January 2020, this epidemic had
spread to 19 countries with 11 791 confirmed cases, including 213 deaths. The World Health Organization has
declared it a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.
Methods:
A scoping review was conducted following the methodological framework suggested by Arksey and
O’Malley. In this scoping review, 65 research articles published before 31 January 2020 were analyzed and discussed
to better understand the epidemiology, causes, clinical diagnosis, prevention and control of this virus. The research
domains, dates of publication, journal language, authors’ affiliations, and methodological characteristics were
included in the analysis. All the findings and statements in this review regarding the outbreak are based on
published information as listed in the references.
Results:
Most of the publications were written using the English language (89.2%). The largest proportion of
published articles were related to causes (38.5%) and a majority (67.7%) were published by Chinese scholars.
Research articles initially focused on causes, but over time there was an increase of the articles related to
prevention and control. Studies thus far have shown that the virus’ origination is in connection to a seafood market
in Wuhan, but specific animal associations have not been confirmed. Reported symptoms include fever, cough,
fatigue, pneumonia, headache, diarrhea, hemoptysis, and dyspnea. Preventive measures such as masks, hand
hygiene practices, avoidance of public contact, case detection, contact tracing, and quarantines have been
discussed as ways to reduce transmission. To date, no specific antiviral treatment has proven effective; hence,
infected people primarily rely on symptomatic treatment and supportive care.
Conclusions:
There has been a rapid surge in research in response to the outbreak of COVID-19. During this early
period, published research primarily explored the epidemiology, causes, clinical manifestation and diagnosis, as well
as prevention and control of the novel coronavirus. Although these studies are relevant to control the current
public emergency, more high-quality research is needed to provide valid and reliable ways to manage this kind of
public health emergency in both the short- and long-term.
Description
Keywords
COVID-19,, Epidemiology,, Causes,, Prevention, and control, Review