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Sars

November 2023

  • People including two young children wear face masks in the street outside a children’s hospital in Beijing, China, 24 November 2023.

    Respiratory infection clusters in China not caused by novel virus, says health ministry

    Data has been supplied to World Health Organization and China says flu and other known pathogens are culprits

April 2023

  • Jonathan Kennedy, author of Pathogenesis, in the pathology museum at St Bartholomew's hospital.

    ‘We’re in a golden age for microbes’: the man rewriting history from the perspective of germs

    Forget ‘great men’ – infection and disease are the really important forces in the development of humankind, believes public health specialist Jonathan Kennedy

March 2023

  • Dr Jiang Yanyong.

    Doctor who exposed China’s cover-up of Sars crisis dies aged 91

    Dr Jiang Yanyong revealed true extent of 2003 outbreak and was put under house arrest for denouncing Tiananmen Square massacre

January 2022

  • Commuters in Tokyo wearing face masks to help curb the spread of the coronavirus.

    The Guardian view on the next pandemic: can we learn Covid’s lessons?

    Editorial: Preparation means not just improving surveillance and buying more protective gear, but rethinking the way we live

August 2021

  • Kenan Malik

    Can Covid death rates be reduced to a clash of values? It’s not so simple

    Kenan Malik
    The pandemic has exploded the myths of lazy stereotypes of east v west

July 2021

  • Children’s drawings supporting the NHS near St Thomas’ hospital, London, April 202

    First year of pandemic claimed lives of 25 young people in England

    Analysis, showing 4% of 5,830 children hospitalised in 12 months to February entered ICU wards, could inform vaccine policy
  • Exscientia scientists at the Oxford Science Park, England, developing a treatment for Covid-19

    Oxford drugs firm gains $1.5m Gates grant for Covid-19 therapy

    Exscientia to use AI in proposed fast-track development of ‘low-cost’ pill for Sars viruses
  • Roadway sign, June 2021, Buckinghamshire, urging vulnerable people to get vaccinated

    Age, sex, vaccine dose, chronic illness – insight into risk factors for severe Covid is growing

    A look at the demographics as 18.5 million people in the UK fall into the heightened risk category

March 2021

  • A woman in Manchester last November, as the second lockdown came into force in England.

    Observer book of the week
    Failures of State by Jonathan Calvert and George Arbuthnott review – how Britain became 'Plague Island'

    In this meticulous, damning investigation, two journalists reveal how the government squandered a legacy of pandemic planning and led Britain into a dead end

December 2020

  • Coronavirus - Fri Nov 27, 2020<br>EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 27 Undated file handout photo issued by the University of Oxford of a researcher in a laboratory at the Jenner Institute working on the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University. Two out of three people have said they would be likely to get a Covid-19 vaccine when one becomes available, according to research. PA Photo. Issue date: Friday November 27, 2020. See PA story HEALTH VaccineAttitude. Photo credit should read: John Cairns/University of Oxford/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.

    Cutting UK overseas aid could harm the fight against future pandemics

    Matthew Baylis and Fiona Tomley
    Funding for global research into zoonotic diseases such as Covid-19, Ebola and Sars is indispensable, argue professors Matthew Baylis and Fiona Tomley

November 2020

  • Farmed mink near Naestved, Denmark

    The Covid-carrying Danish mink are a warning sign – but is anyone heeding it?

    Matthew Baylis
    Sars, Mers, now this: we must think hard about how we farm animals that are known hosts of human coronaviruses, says Matthew Baylis, the Oxenhale chair of veterinary epidemiology at the University of Liverpool

October 2020

  • TOPSHOT-NIGERIA-CRIME-POLICE-DEMO<br>TOPSHOT - Protesters chant and sing solidarity songs as they barricade barricade the Lagos-Ibadan expressway to protest against police brutality and the killing of protesters by the military, at Magboro, Ogun State, on October 21, 2020. - Buildings in Nigeria’s main city of Lagos were torched on October 21, 2020 and sporadic clashes erupted after the shooting of peaceful protesters in which Amnesty International said security forces had killed several people. Witnesses said gunmen opened fire on a crowd of over 1,000 people on the evening of October 20, 2020, to disperse them after a curfew was imposed to end spiralling protests over police brutality and deep-rooted social grievances. (Photo by PIUS UTOMI EKPEI / AFP) (Photo by PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP via Getty Images)

    'Just stop killing us': young Nigerians rise up against brutal police force

    Protesters remain defiant after at least 12 were gunned down in Lagos

September 2020

  • Civet cat in the Xin Yuan animal meat market, Guangzhou, China

    Animals farmed
    Covid and farm animals: nine pandemics that changed the world

    Covid-19 has got experts thinking urgently about the risk of diseases passing from farmed animals to humans. We examine the major outbreaks of the past two centuries

August 2020

  • Image of a coronavirus drawn on a blackboard alongside scientific equipment and diagrams

    What we are learning about Covid-19 and kids

    As schools around the world prepare to reopen, emerging scientific evidence about children and coronavirus is coming to light

July 2020

  • Transportation of timber logs, Amazon rainforestBRAZIL

    We are entering an era of pandemics – it will end only when we protect the rainforest

    Peter Daszak
    Reducing deforestation and the exploitation of wildlife will help to break the chain of disease emergence, says Peter Daszak, president of EcoHealth Alliance
  • Pigs

    Coronavirus: world treating symptoms, not cause of pandemics, says UN

    Ongoing destruction of nature will result in stream of animal diseases jumping to humans, says report
  • Torsten Bell

    Hidden gems from the world of research
    We might never get over the fear that the pandemic induced

    Torsten Bell
    Covid-19 taught us to be cautious, but that will make economic recovery all the more difficult

June 2020

  • An aerial image of mangroves in Morondava, west Madagascar.

    Pandemics result from destruction of nature, say UN and WHO

    Experts call for legislation and trade deals worldwide to encourage green recovery
  • Covid-19 investigations
    How would a coronavirus vaccine work and will we even get one? – video explainer

    Science editor Ian Sample explains how vaccines work, runs through some of the main obstacles to creating one for coronavirus and preparing it for public use, and tells us which scenario he thinks is most realistic in the next 18 months   

  • pangolin standing on a wall, Indonesia

    The age of extinction
    China raises protection for pangolins by removing scales from medicine list

    Campaigners hope the move will help end global trade in the scaly anteater, identified as a possible host for Covid-19
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