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Source: The Expose
All part of the plan? – China is hiding the nature and spread of an Ebola/Marburg-like Virus that has struck the country
BY RHODA WILSON | JANUARY 15, 2022
In mid-December 2021 reports were coming out of China's northwest region of a rise in severe cases and deaths due to haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome ("HFRS") caused by hantavirus – one of the viruses identified by the US Centers for Disease Control ("CDC") as a potential Category C bioterrorism agent.
Source: The Expose
All part of the plan? – China is hiding the nature and spread of an Ebola/Marburg-like Virus that has struck the country
BY RHODA WILSON | JANUARY 15, 2022
In mid-December 2021 reports were coming out of China's northwest region of a rise in severe cases and deaths due to haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome ("HFRS") caused by hantavirus – one of the viruses identified by the US Centers for Disease Control ("CDC") as a potential Category C bioterrorism agent.
The communist regime in China is hiding the nature and spread of this latest disease. This has many experts worried including Dr. Robert Malone who is the inventor of the mRNA vaccines.
Dr. Malone told The War Room, "They are using language that this is a haemorrhagic fever virus. If that's the case then it would be very odd that this would be something caused by the coronavirus. That terminology is usually used for viruses in the family of Ebola. So, this is something that many people have feared is the development of a rapidly spreading Ebola-like haemorrhagic fever virus. But we have not knowledge of whether that is going on here or not."
In November 2021, Atriva initiated Phase II trials of their drug zapnometinib as a treatment for hospitalised Covid patients. On 10 January 2022, Atriva obtained US Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") orphan drug designation for zapnometinib to treat hantavirus Infections – to "address urgent needs" of infected patients as hantavirus is "considered an emerging global health threat."
Hantavirus
Viral haemorrhagic fevers ("VHFs") are a group of illnesses caused by four families of viruses: arenavirus; filoviruses; bunyaviruses; and, flaviviruses. VHFs include the Ebola and Marburg, Lassa fever, yellow fever and hantavirus. Ebola and Marburg are filoviruses and hantaviruses are of the Bunyaviridae family.
Hantaviruses are single-stranded, enveloped, negative-sense RNA viruses. Some strains cause potentially fatal diseases in humans, such as HFRS, or hantavirus pulmonary syndrome ("HPS"). Wikipedia's page states that human infections of hantaviruses have almost entirely been linked to human contact with rodent excrement; however, in 2005 and 2019, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus was reported in South America.
In 2013, a paper published in Science China, Life Sciences warned of an emerging hemorrhagic fever in China caused by a novel bunyavirus SFTSV with a fatality rate of 12% and an annual incidence of SFTSV, the disease, as approximately five per 100,000 of the rural population. The authors noted that ticks were the most likely transmission vectors and domestic animals, including goats, dogs, and cattle, are potential amplifying hosts.
In January 2020 a paper was published which noted that hantaviruses are rodent-transmitted viruses and "together, caused approximately 200,000 human infections worldwide in recent years, with a case fatality rate of 5-15% for HFRS and up to 40% for [hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome] HCPS … There is currently no effective treatment available for either HFRS or HCPS … vaccines against HTNV or SEOV are licensed for use in the Republic of Korea and China, but the protective efficacies of these vaccines are uncertain."
China
In mid-December 2019 reports began emerging from Xi 'an, in the Northwest region of China, of an outbreak of HFRS. Medical experts called on the public "not to panic as vaccinations can effectively prevent and control the disease," Global Times wrote.
Although, as mentioned above, the authors of a 2020 paper wrote "the protective efficacies of these vaccines are uncertain."
Global Times continued: "human-to-human transmission is basically impossible … it can be transmitted by a mouse bite, by eating food or water that a mouse has crawled over, or by contact with infected mouse blood, urine or faeces."
At the time, due to a recent Covid-19 outbreak, many hospitals with infection units temporarily stopped receiving patients and were only attending to patients infected with Covid.
"Haemorrhagic fever is a common infectious disease in northern China. Starting from October every year, some areas of Shaanxi enter the high incidence season of haemorrhagic fever," Global Times noted, "according to data released by the China CDC, the number of epidemic haemorrhagic fever cases in China from January to August in 2020 was 4,359, and the death toll was 21. In 2019, there were 9,596 cases and 44 deaths from the disease in China, with an average mortality rate of 0.4 percent."
A public health expert at Peking University said there is no need to panic and it was less likely that China will have a big outbreak of the disease. Tests, targeted drugs and effective vaccines are available for the disease, medical experts said and urged quick vaccinations.
"The vaccine is given in three doses, with the first two doses spaced 14 days apart and the third at least six months later … It is recommended to wear a mask to prevent aerosol pollution in areas where weeds or straw are piled up and rat urine and dung may exist," Global Times reported on 19 December 2021.
On 20 December, quoting the Global Times, WIO News wrote: "it is a 'natural epidemic disease with high fatality rate'. However, there is no confirmation on the exact number of fatalities."
On the same day, Caixin Global reported Xi'an, since October, recorded a number of cases of HFRS, with local authorities pointing out the figure is "significantly" higher than earlier this year and the same period last year:
Please go to The Expose to read more.
Dr. Malone told The War Room, "They are using language that this is a haemorrhagic fever virus. If that's the case then it would be very odd that this would be something caused by the coronavirus. That terminology is usually used for viruses in the family of Ebola. So, this is something that many people have feared is the development of a rapidly spreading Ebola-like haemorrhagic fever virus. But we have not knowledge of whether that is going on here or not."
In November 2021, Atriva initiated Phase II trials of their drug zapnometinib as a treatment for hospitalised Covid patients. On 10 January 2022, Atriva obtained US Food and Drug Administration ("FDA") orphan drug designation for zapnometinib to treat hantavirus Infections – to "address urgent needs" of infected patients as hantavirus is "considered an emerging global health threat."
Hantavirus
Viral haemorrhagic fevers ("VHFs") are a group of illnesses caused by four families of viruses: arenavirus; filoviruses; bunyaviruses; and, flaviviruses. VHFs include the Ebola and Marburg, Lassa fever, yellow fever and hantavirus. Ebola and Marburg are filoviruses and hantaviruses are of the Bunyaviridae family.
Hantaviruses are single-stranded, enveloped, negative-sense RNA viruses. Some strains cause potentially fatal diseases in humans, such as HFRS, or hantavirus pulmonary syndrome ("HPS"). Wikipedia's page states that human infections of hantaviruses have almost entirely been linked to human contact with rodent excrement; however, in 2005 and 2019, human-to-human transmission of the Andes virus was reported in South America.
In 2013, a paper published in Science China, Life Sciences warned of an emerging hemorrhagic fever in China caused by a novel bunyavirus SFTSV with a fatality rate of 12% and an annual incidence of SFTSV, the disease, as approximately five per 100,000 of the rural population. The authors noted that ticks were the most likely transmission vectors and domestic animals, including goats, dogs, and cattle, are potential amplifying hosts.
In January 2020 a paper was published which noted that hantaviruses are rodent-transmitted viruses and "together, caused approximately 200,000 human infections worldwide in recent years, with a case fatality rate of 5-15% for HFRS and up to 40% for [hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome] HCPS … There is currently no effective treatment available for either HFRS or HCPS … vaccines against HTNV or SEOV are licensed for use in the Republic of Korea and China, but the protective efficacies of these vaccines are uncertain."
China
In mid-December 2019 reports began emerging from Xi 'an, in the Northwest region of China, of an outbreak of HFRS. Medical experts called on the public "not to panic as vaccinations can effectively prevent and control the disease," Global Times wrote.
Although, as mentioned above, the authors of a 2020 paper wrote "the protective efficacies of these vaccines are uncertain."
Global Times continued: "human-to-human transmission is basically impossible … it can be transmitted by a mouse bite, by eating food or water that a mouse has crawled over, or by contact with infected mouse blood, urine or faeces."
At the time, due to a recent Covid-19 outbreak, many hospitals with infection units temporarily stopped receiving patients and were only attending to patients infected with Covid.
"Haemorrhagic fever is a common infectious disease in northern China. Starting from October every year, some areas of Shaanxi enter the high incidence season of haemorrhagic fever," Global Times noted, "according to data released by the China CDC, the number of epidemic haemorrhagic fever cases in China from January to August in 2020 was 4,359, and the death toll was 21. In 2019, there were 9,596 cases and 44 deaths from the disease in China, with an average mortality rate of 0.4 percent."
A public health expert at Peking University said there is no need to panic and it was less likely that China will have a big outbreak of the disease. Tests, targeted drugs and effective vaccines are available for the disease, medical experts said and urged quick vaccinations.
"The vaccine is given in three doses, with the first two doses spaced 14 days apart and the third at least six months later … It is recommended to wear a mask to prevent aerosol pollution in areas where weeds or straw are piled up and rat urine and dung may exist," Global Times reported on 19 December 2021.
On 20 December, quoting the Global Times, WIO News wrote: "it is a 'natural epidemic disease with high fatality rate'. However, there is no confirmation on the exact number of fatalities."
On the same day, Caixin Global reported Xi'an, since October, recorded a number of cases of HFRS, with local authorities pointing out the figure is "significantly" higher than earlier this year and the same period last year:
"The number of severe cases and deaths has also increased compared with previous years, according to a Wednesday report published by the Xi'an disease control centre, which didn't specify how many cases had been detected.Schools from kindergarten through 12th grade were shut down "until further notice," reportedly primarily to stop the spread of coronavirus, as hantavirus spreads through contact with infected rats and mice, Breitbart reported. But oddly, as The South China Morning Post noted, the school shutdown appeared to be a response to the "double danger of a Covid-19 outbreak and deadly haemorrhagic fever cases."
"The report said the incidence rate remains high and recommended a range of countermeasures including pest prevention and extermination."
Please go to The Expose to read more.
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