What Is COVID-19?
A coronavirus is
a kind of common virus that causes an infection in your nose, sinuses, or
upper throat. Most coronaviruses aren't dangerous.
In
early 2020, after a December 2019 outbreak in China, the World Health
Organization identified SARS-CoV-2 as a new type of coronavirus. The
outbreak quickly spread around the world.
Covid-19 is
a disease caused by SARS-CoV-2 that can trigger what doctors call a respiratory
tract infection. It can affect your upper respiratory tract (sinuses, nose, and
throat) or lower respiratory tract (windpipe and lungs).
It
spreads the same way other coronaviruses do, mainly through person-to-person
contact. Infections range from mild to deadly.
SARS-CoV-2
is one of seven types of coronavirus, including the ones that cause severe
diseases like Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) and sudden acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS). The other coronaviruses cause most of the colds
that affect us during the year but aren’t a serious threat for otherwise
healthy people.
Is
there more than one strain of SARS-CoV-2?
It’s
normal for a virus to change, or mutate, as it infects people. A Chinese study
of 103 COVID-19 cases suggests the virus that causes it has done just that. They
found two strains, which they named L and S. The S type is older, but the L
type was more common in early stages of the outbreak. They think one may cause
more cases of the disease than the other, but they’re still working on what it
all means.
How
long will the coronavirus last?
It’s
too soon to tell how long the pandemic will continue. It depends on many
things, including researchers’ work to learn more about the virus, their search
for a treatment and a vaccine, and the public’s efforts to slow the spread.
More
than 100 vaccine candidates are in various stages of development and testing.
This process usually takes years. Researchers are speeding it up as much as
they can, but it still might take 12 to 18 months to find a vaccine that works
and is safe.
Symptoms of COVID-19
The
main symptoms include:
·
Fever
·
Coughing
·
Shortness of breath
·
Trouble breathing
·
Fatigue
·
Chills, sometimes with shaking
·
Body aches
·
Headache
·
Sore throat
·
Loss of smell or taste
·
Nausea
·
Diarrhea
The
virus can lead to pneumonia, respiratory failure septic shock, and death. Many
COVID-19 complications may be caused by a condition known as cytokine release
syndrome or a cytokine storm. This is when an infection triggers your immune
system to flood your bloodstream with inflammatory proteins called cytokines.
They can kill tissue and damage your organs.
If
you notice the following severe symptoms in yourself or a loved one, get
medical help right away:
·
Trouble breathing or shortness of breath
·
Ongoing chest pain or pressure
·
New confusion
·
Can’t wake up fully
·
Bluish lips or face
Strokes
have also been reported in some people who have COVID-19. Remember FAST:
·
Face. Is one side of the person’s face numb or drooping?
Is their smile lopsided?
·
Arms. Is one arm weak or numb? If they try to raise both
arms, does one arm sag?
·
Speech. Can they speak clearly? Ask them to
repeat a sentence.
·
Time. Every minute counts when someone shows signs of a
stroke. Call 911 right away.
If
you’re infected, symptoms can show up in as few as 2 days or as many as 14. It
varies from person to person.
According
to researchers in China, these were the most common symptoms among people who
had COVID-19:
·
Fever 99%
·
Fatigue 70%
·
Cough 59%
·
Lack of appetite 40%
·
Body aches 35%
·
Shortness of breath 31%
·
Mucus/phlegm 27%
Some
people who are hospitalized for COVID-19 have also had dangerous blood clots,
including in their legs, lungs, and arteries.
What
to do if you think you have it
If
you live in or have traveled to an area where COVID-19 is spreading:
·
If you don’t feel well, stay home. Even if you have
mild symptoms like a headache and runny nose, stay in until you’re better. This
lets doctors focus on people who are more seriously ill and protects health
care workers and people you might meet along the way. You might hear this
called self-quarantine. Try to stay in a separate room away from other people
in your home. Use a separate bathroom if you can.
·
Call the doctor if you have trouble breathing. You need to get medical
help as soon as possible. Calling ahead (rather than showing up) will let the
doctor direct you to the proper place, which may not be your doctor’s office.
If you don’t have a regular doctor, call your local board of health. They can
tell you where to go for testing and treatment.
·
Follow your doctor’s advice and keep up with the news on
COVID-19. Between
your doctor and health care authorities, you’ll get the care you need and
information on how to prevent the virus from spreading.
For
more information about COVID-19.
How
do I know if it’s COVID-19, a cold, or the flu?
Symptoms
of COVID-19 can be similar to a bad cold or the flu. Your doctor will suspect
COVID-19 if:
·
You have a fever and a cough.
·
You live in an area with the virus or have traveled to
places where it has spread.
Is
COVID-19 worse than the flu?
Unlike
the flu, a lot of people aren’t immune to the coronavirus because it’s so new.
If you do catch it, the virus triggers your body to make things called
antibodies. Researchers are looking at whether they give you protection against
catching it again.
The
coronavirus also appears to cause higher rates of severe illness and death than
the flu. But the symptoms themselves can vary widely from person to person.
Is
COVID-19 seasonal like the flu?
A
few lab studies have found that higher temperatures and humidity levels
might help slow the spread of the coronavirus. But experts advise caution and
say weather changes won’t matter without thorough public health efforts. Also,
past flu pandemics have happened year-round.
Causes of the New
Coronavirus
Researchers
aren’t sure what caused it. There’s more than one type of coronavirus. They’re
common in people and in animals including bats, camels, cats, and cattle.
SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is similar to MERS and SARS. They
all came from bats.
Coronavirus Risk Factors
Anyone
can get COVID-19, and most infections are mild. The older you are, the higher
your risk of severe illness.
You
also a have higher chance of serious illness if you have one of these health
conditions:
·
Chronic kidney disease
·
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
·
A weakened immune system because of an organ transplant
·
Obesity
·
Serious heart conditions such as heart failure or
coronary artery disease
·
Sickle cell disease
·
Type 2 diabetes
Conditions
that could lead to severe COVID-19 illness include:
·
Moderate to severe asthma
·
Diseases that affect your blood vessels and blood flow to
your brain
·
Cystic fibrosis
·
High blood pressure
·
A weakened immune system because of a blood or bone
marrow transplant, HIV, or medications like corticosteroids
·
Dementia
·
Liver disease
·
Pregnancy
·
Damaged or scarred lung tissue (pulmonary fibrosis)
·
Smoking
·
Thalassemia
·
Type 1 diabetes
Some
children and teens who are in the hospital with COVID-19 have an inflammatory
condition that doctors are calling multisystem inflammatory syndrome in
children. Doctors think it may be linked to the virus. It causes symptoms
similar to those of toxic shock and of Kawasaki disease, a condition that
causes inflammation in kids’ blood vessels.
Coronavirus Transmission
How
does the coronavirus spread?
SARS-CoV-2,
the virus, mainly spreads from person to person.
Most
of the time, it spreads when a sick person coughs or sneezes. They can spray
droplets as far as 6 feet away. If you breathe them in or swallow them, the
virus can get into your body. Some people who have the virus don't have
symptoms, but they can still spread the virus.
You
can also get the virus from touching a surface or object the virus is on, then
touching your mouth, nose, or possibly your eyes. Most viruses can live for
several hours that they land on. A study shows that SARS-CoV-2 can last
for several hours on various types of surfaces:
·
Copper: 4 hours
·
Cardboard: up to 24 hours
·
Plastic or stainless steel: 2 to 3 days
That’s
why it’s important to disinfect surfaces to get rid of the virus.
Some
dogs and cats have tested positive for the virus. A few have shown signs of
illness. But there’s no evidence that humans can catch this coronavirus from an
animal.
What
is community spread?
Doctors
and health officials use this term when they don’t know the source of the
infection. With COVID-19, it usually refers to someone who gets the virus even
though they haven’t been out of the country or haven’t been exposed to someone
who’s traveled abroad or who has COVID-19.
In
February 2020, the CDC confirmed a COVID-19 infection in California in a person
who had not traveled to an affected area or been exposed to someone with the
disease. This marked the first instance of community spread in the U.S. It’s
likely that person was exposed to someone who was infected but didn’t know it.
How
fast is it spreading?
The
number of people infected by SARS-CoV-2 changes every day. See our new story for
the latest updates on this developing story.
How
contagious is the coronavirus?
The
transmission rate is relatively high. Early research has estimated that one
person who has it can spread it to between 2 and 2.5 others. One study found
that the rate was higher, with one case spreading to between 4.7 and 6.6 other
people. By comparison, one person who has the seasonal flu will pass it to
between 1.1 and 2.3 others.
We
can work to lower the transmission rate by washing hands often, keeping
common surfaces clean, limiting contact with other people, and wearing cloth
face masks when we can’t stay 6 feet away from others.
Can
coronavirus be transmitted through groceries, packages, or food?
You’re
much more likely to get COVID-19 from another person than from packages,
groceries, or food. If you’re in a high- risk group, stay home and use a
delivery service or have a friend shop for you. Have them leave the items
outside your front door, if you can. If you do your own shopping, try to stay
at least 6 feet away from other shoppers. That isn’t always possible, so wear a
cloth face mask, too.
Wash
your hands for at least 20 seconds before and after bringing things into
your home. The coronavirus can linger on hard surfaces, so clean and disinfect
countertops and anything else your bags have touched. You can wipe down
plastic, metal, or glass packaging with soap and water if you want.
There’s
no evidence that anyone has gotten COVID-19 from food or food containers.
Coronavirus Diagnosis
Call
your doctor or local health department if you think you’ve been exposed and
have symptoms like:
·
Fever of 100 F or higher
·
Cough
·
Trouble breathing
In
most states, decisions about who gets tested for COVID-19 are made at the state
or local level.
A
swab test is the most common method. It looks for signs of the virus in your
upper respiratory tract. The person giving the test puts a swab up your nose to
get a sample from the back of your nose and throat. That sample usually goes to
a lab that looks for viral material, but some areas may have rapid tests that
give results in as little as 15 minutes.
If
there are signs of the virus, the test is positive. A negative test could mean
there is no virus or there wasn’t enough to measure. That can happen early in
an infection. It usually takes 24 hours to get results, but the tests must be
collected, stored, shipped to a lab, and processed.
The
FDA is granting emergency use authorizations for tests that don’t have full
approval yet. These include a home nasal swab test, a home saliva test, and
tests that check your blood for things called antibodies. Your immune system
makes antibodies in response to an infection.
A
swab test can only tell whether you have the virus in your body at that moment.
But an antibody test can show whether you’ve ever been exposed to the
virus, even if you didn’t have symptoms. This is important in officials’
efforts to learn how widespread COVID-19 is. In time, it might also help them
figure out who’s immune to the virus.
The
FDA is working with laboratories across the country to develop more tests.
Coronavirus Prevention
Take
these steps:
Wash
your hands often with soap and water or clean them with an alcohol-based
sanitizer. This kills viruses on your hands.
·
Practice social distancing. Because you can
have and spread the virus without knowing it, you should stay home as much as
possible. If you do have to go out, stay at least 6 feet away from others.
·
Cover your nose and mouth in public. If you have
COVID-19, you can spread it even if you don’t feel sick. Wear a cloth face
covering to protect others. This isn’t a replacement for social distancing. You
still need to keep a 6-foot distance between yourself and those around you.
Don’t use a face mask meant for health care workers. And don’t put a face
covering on anyone who is:
o
Under 2 years old
o
Having trouble breathing
o
Unconscious or can’t remove the mask on their own for
other reasons
·
Don’t touch your face. Coronaviruses can live on surfaces
you touch for several hours. If they get on your hands and you touch your eyes,
nose, or mouth, they can get into your body.
·
Clean and disinfect. You can clean first with
soap and water, but disinfect surfaces you touch often, like tables, doorknobs,
light switches, toilets, faucets, and sinks. Use a mix of household bleach and
water (1/3 cup bleach per gallon of water, or 4 teaspoons bleach per quart of
water) or a household cleaner that’s approved to treat SARS-CoV-2.Wear gloves
when you clean and throw them away when you’re done.
There’s
no proof that herbal therapies and teas can prevent infection.
COVID-19
preparation tips
In
addition to practicing the prevention tips listed above, you can:
·
Meet as a household or larger family to talk about who
needs what.
·
If you have people at high risk ask their doctor what to
do.
·
Talk to your neighbors about emergency planning. Join
your neighborhood chat group or website to stay in touch.
·
Find community aid organizations that can help with
health care, food delivery, and other supplies.
·
Make an emergency contact list. Include family, friends,
neighbors, carpool drivers, doctors, teachers, employers, and the local health
department.
·
Choose a room (or rooms) where you can keep someone who’s
sick or who’s been exposed separate from the rest of you.
·
Talk to your child’s school about keeping up with
assignments.
·
Set yourself up to work from home if your office is
closed.
·
Reach out friends or family if you live alone. Make plans
for them to check on you by phone, email, or video chat.
Can
a face mask protect you from infection?
The
CDC recommends that you wear a cloth face mask if you go out in public.
This is an added layer of protection for everyone, on top of social distancing
efforts. You can spread the virus when you talk or cough, even if you don’t
know that you have it or if you aren’t showing signs of infection.
Surgical
masks and N95 masks should be reserved for health care workers and first
responders, the CDC says.
Is
it safe to travel during a pandemic?
Crowded
places can raise your chances of getting COVID-19. The CDC recommends against
international or cruise ship travel during the pandemic.
·
Is the coronavirus spreading where you’re going?
·
Will you have close contact with other people during the
trip?
·
Are you at higher risk of severe illness if you catch the
virus?
·
Do you live with someone who has a serious medical
condition?
·
Will the place where you’ll be staying be cleaned?
·
Will you have access to food and other necessities?
·
If you choose to travel, stay away from sick people. Wash
your hands often, and try not to touch your face. Wear a cloth face mask when
you’ll be around other people. Some airlines require all customers to use them.
How
can you help stop the spread of the coronavirus?
Some
officials are easing restrictions and allowing businesses to reopen. This
doesn’t mean the virus is gone. Continue to follow safety practices such as
wearing a cloth face mask in public places.
Because
the virus spread from person to person, it’s important to limit your contact
with other people as much as possible.
Some
people work in “essential businesses” that are vital to daily life, such as
health care, law enforcement, and public utilities. Everyone else should stay
home as much as you can and wear a cloth face mask when you can’t. You might
hear officials use these terms when they talk about staying home:
·
Social distancing or physical distancing, keeping space
between yourself and other people when you have to go out
·
Quarantine, keeping someone home and separated
from other people if they might have been exposed to the virus
·
Isolation, keeping sick people away from healthy
people, including using a separate “sick” bedroom and bathroom when possible
Coronavirus Vaccine
There’s
no vaccine, but intense research to create one has been underway around the
world since scientists shared the virus’ genetic makeup in January 2020.
Vaccine testing in humans started with record speed in March 2020. More than
100 vaccine projects are in various phases of development.
If
you're interested in volunteering for a COVID-19 vaccine trial, here are some
sources of more information:
Government-sponsored
sites:
Covid-19
prevention Network (CoVPN). This is funded by the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases and coordinated by the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center in Seattle. Its goal is to enroll thousands of volunteers into
COVID vaccine trials nationwide. Many research centers are using this site to
find volunteers.
Individual
hospitals, universities, research centers, and others may also provide
opportunities to enroll in a COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial. Some include:
Coronavirus Treatment
There’s
no specific treatment for COVID-19. People who get a mild case need care to
ease their symptoms, like rest, fluids, and fever control. Take
over-the-counter medicine for a sore throat, body aches, and fever. But don't
give aspirin to children or teens younger than 19.
You
might have heard that you shouldn't take ibuprofen to treat COVID-19 symptoms.
But the National Institutes of Health says people who have the virus can use no
steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or acetaminophen as usual.
Antibiotics
won’t help because they treat bacteria, not viruses. If you hear about people
with COVID-19 getting antibiotics, it’s for an infection that came along with
the disease.
People
with severe symptoms need to be cared for in the hospital.
Many
clinical trials are under way to explore treatments used for other conditions
that could fight COVID-19 and to develop new ones.
Several
studies are focused on an antiviral medication called remdesivir, which was
created to fight Ebola. An emergency FDA ruling lets doctors use it for people
hospitalized with COVID-19 and in clinical trials. Researchers in the U.S. say
remdesivir helped patients in one study recover from the disease 31% faster.
Clinical
trials are also under way for tocilizumab, another medication used to treat
autoimmune conditions. And the FDA is also allowing clinical trials and
hospital use of blood plasma from people who’ve had COVID-19 and recovered to
help others build immunity. You’ll hear this called convalescent plasma.
The
FDA had issued an emergency use ruling for hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine,
which treat malaria and autoimmune conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and
lupus. But the ruling was removed because studies didn’t show that the drugs
worked against COVID-19 or that their benefits outweigh the risks.
Is
there a cure for the new coronavirus?
There’s
no cure yet, but researchers are working hard to find one.
COVID-19 Outlook
Every
case is different. You may have mild flu-like symptoms for a few days after
exposure, then get better. But some cases can be severe or fatal.
Symptoms
can also linger for weeks, even if they’re mild.
More
than a third of people older than 18 who have signs of the virus aren’t totally
recovered 2 or 3 weeks later, according to a CDC survey. Fatigue and cough were
the symptoms that were most likely to linger.
Some
other people who’ve had COVID-19 develop a condition similar to myalgic
encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome. They may have a
brain fog, severe fatigue, pain, trouble thinking, or dizziness.
What
is the recovery rate for coronavirus?
Scientists
and researchers are constantly tracking COVID-19 infections and recoveries. But
they don’t have information about the outcome of every infection. Early
estimates predict that the overall Covid-19 recovery rate will be between 97%
and 99.75%.
Doctors
aren’t sure if you can get reinfected after you’ve had it. With other
coronaviruses that only cause colds, you have a period that you’re immune, but
that goes away over time.
Past Coronaviruses
Are
coronaviruses new?
Coronaviruses
were first found in 1960s. Almost everyone gets a coronavirus infection at
least once in their life, most likely as a young child. In the United States,
regular coronaviruses are more common in the fall and winter, but anyone can
come down with a coronavirus infection at any time.
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