
A virus is a micro-organism, too small to be seen without a
microscope, that causes infectious disease in animals and humans.
Background
In December 2019 a new disease was identified in China. On
investigation, the disease was caused by a new virus of the coronavirus family,
and has since been officially named COVID-19.
It is believed that COVID-19 originated in a meat and
live-animal market in the city of Wuhan in the province of Hubei in the country
of China. It subsequently spread to other countries and was officially
pronounced a pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 11 March 2020.
Glossary
Each of the following terms, listed in alphabetical order,
has 1) a basic definition and 2) an example sentence showing how the term may
be used in context.
While for simplicity we sometimes refer below to “humans and
animals” or "animals and humans", we do of course recognize that humans
are in fact animals.
Animal-human interface (noun): any point where animals
(domestic and wild) and humans meet - Animal diseases can potentially pass to
humans at any animal-human interface such as a zoo, farm or animal market.
Asymptomatic (adjective): showing no symptoms of a
particular disease - She had no idea her husband had coronavirus because he was
asymptomatic.
Carrier (noun): a person or animal that transmits a disease
to others, whether suffering from it them or not - People who are asymptomatic
can still be carriers.
Carry (verb): be infected with a disease and able to
transmit it to others, whether symptomatic or asymptomatic - Some people may
carry coronavirus without knowing it.
Community spread (noun): transmission of a disease directly
within a community and not by importation from a foreign source - With this
many new positive cases, the evidence suggests that we now have community
spread right here in our county.
Contact tracing (noun): identification and monitoring of
people who may have had contact with an infectious person - By insisting on
strict contact tracing as soon as someone was potentially infected, they
managed to control the spread of the disease.
Contagious (adjective): describing a disease that can pass
from person to person, usually by direct contact; describing a person with such
a disease. See infectious - Patients who are still contagious are kept in
isolation.
Coronavirus (noun): any one of a large family of viruses
that can cause disease in the breathing and eating systems of humans and
animals (respiratory and digestive systems). Coronavirus diseases can range
from the relatively harmless common cold to more severe and potentially fatal
diseases such as SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome). Seen through a
microscope, coronaviruses appear circular with spikes, like crowns 👑, and are named from the Latin for crown, which is
corona. Coronaviruses normally originate in animals and usually cannot be
passed to humans. But very occasionally a coronavirus mutates and can then be
transmitted from animal to human, and then from human to human. This is how the
SARS epidemic started in the early 2000s, for example - Did you know that flu
is a coronavirus disease?
COVID-19 (noun): official name for the novel coronavirus
disease that emerged in China in 2019. COVID-19 = Coronavirus Disease-2019 -
All countries are requested to report any new confirmed case of COVID-19 within
48 hours.
Diagnose (verb): identify an illness by examining the
symptoms - Only a medical professional can properly diagnose the cause of your
problem.
Diagnosis (noun): identification of an illness by
examination of the symptoms - If you're not happy with the doctor's diagnosis
you could always get a second opinion.
Disease (noun): illness; sickness; a disorder of the body -
Polio is one of several serious diseases that have been nearly eradicated.
Droplets (noun): the spray produced when people cough or
sneeze, and which can spread diseases like COVID-19 - Health care personnel
wear protective clothing to guard against the disease carried in droplets when
infected people sneeze or cough.
Epidemic (noun): occurrence of a particular disease in a
large number of people in a particular area. See outbreak, pandemic - The city
was devastated by an epidemic of cholera in the 19th century.
Flatten the curve (verb - figurative): change the steep
upward curve on a graph of new disease cases to a flatter, shallower upward
curve over a longer time period through measures such as social distancing -
Authorities hope that by introducing social distancing they will be able to
flatten the curve and avoid hospitals being rapidly overwhelmed with new cases.
Herd immunity (noun): an indirect protection from a disease
resulting from a large percentage of the population gaining immunity (either
through vaccination or through recovering from the disease) - This virus is
unlike the seasonal flu because there is currently no vaccine or herd immunity,
he said.
Incubation period (noun): the time from a person’s first
exposure to a disease to the time when symptoms develop - When they know the
incubation period they will know how long to keep people in quarantine.
Infect (verb): affect a human or animal with a
disease-causing organism - But can it infect human beings?
infected (adjective/past participle): affected with a
disease-causing organism - They were able to cure the infected left lung before
the infection could spead to the right lung.
infection (noun): process of infecting; state of being
infected; infectious disease - Breast milk can help protect babies against
various infections.
infectious (adjective): describing a disease that can be
transmitted through the environment; describing a human or animal capable of
spreading an infection. See contagious - Avoid the dogs as they may still be
infectious.
Strictly speaking, a contagious disease is transmitted by
physical contact, and an infectious disease is transmitted via micro-organisms
in the air or water. But in practice there is little or no difference in
meaning between contagious and infectious when related to disease.
isolate (verb): keep an infected person away from healthy
people - They will isolate anyone suspected of having the disease.
isolation (noun): separation of infected people from healthy
people for serious contagious diseases like COVID-19 - Travellers arriving from
the infected area were immediately put in isolation.
mask (noun): a piece of fibre or cloth that fits over the
nose and mouth to protect other people from the wearer's germs and/or the
wearer from germs in the air - The World Health Organization recommend that
people should not wear masks unless they may be carrying COVID-19 (to protect
other people) or are caring for anyone suffering from COVID-19 (to protect
themselves).
novel coronavirus (noun): the word novel means “new”, and a
newly identified coronavirus strain is often called a novel coronavirus - Until
they gave it a name, they mostly referred to COVID-19 as novel coronavirus
(disease).
outbreak (noun): a sudden occurrence of a disease (or other
unpleasant thing). See epidemic, pandemic - There was another outbreak of the
disease in 1993 but the cause was uncertain.
pandemic (noun): occurrence of a particular disease
throughout a whole country or the world. See epidemic, outbreak - Just after
the First World War there was a pandemic of flu which killed up to 40 million
people worldwide.
pathogen (noun): a micro-organism or germ such as a
bacterium or virus that can cause disease - Fortunately, most pathogens are
dealt with by the body's immune system.
patient zero (noun): the person identified as the first to
become infected with a disease in an outbreak - Authoritites usually try to
determine who patient zero was in any given outbreak as can help answer
important questions about how, when and why it started.
PCR test (noun): test that detects viral particles in blood
or other body fluids. (PCR = polymerase chain reaction) - The PCR test is one
of the tools that doctors use to diagnose certain coronavirus diseases.
personal protective equipment (PPE) (noun): special
clothing, headgear, goggles, masks and other garments that shield people from
injury or infection. - Much of the PPE worn by doctors and nurses has to be
worn once only and destroyed after use.
person-to-person (adjective): describing the spread of a
disease from one person to another, typically through touch including shaking
hands, kissing, sexual intercourse etc. - In January an infected American woman
returning home from China transmitted the virus to her husband, marking the
first known example of person-to-person spread of the virus in the USA.
quarantine (noun): isolation and monitoring of people who
seem healthy but may have been exposed to an infectious disease to see if they
develop symptoms - For centuries it's been common for ships arriving from
infected areas to be kept in quarantine at the docks, originally for 40 days
which is where the term comes from.
SARS-CoV-2 (noun): Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome CoronaVirus
2; final official name for the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. (This virus
was previously known as 2019-nCoV.) - SARS-CoV-2 is the name of the virus and
COVID-19 is the name of the disease.
screening (noun): testing of people for the presence of a
disease. For COVID-19 the first step in screening is usually taking a person’s
temperature - They now conduct screening for all incoming passengers.
self-isolate (verb): isolate oneself; put oneself in
quarantine, away from other people - The prime minister's wife has tested
positive for COVID-19 and the couple are now self-isolating and working by
phone and Skype.
social distancing (noun): practice of encouraging people to
minimize contact and closeness, whether by banning large or even small
groups/meetings (football matches, nightclubs), or by maintaining a minimum
distance between people (for example one meter or two meters) - The government
has instructed schools to take social distancing measures to slow the spread of
the virus.
super spreader (noun): person infected with a virus etc. who
transmits or spreads it to an unusually large number of people - One so-called
"super spreader" in South Korea infected at least 37 people at her
church with the virus.
symptomatic (adjective): showing symptoms of a particular
disease - Anyone who is symptomatic is advised to phone a doctor and get
tested.
symptoms (noun): a physical or mental feature that indicates
illness/disease - Typical symptoms of COVID-19 are fever, coughing, and
shortness of breath.
test negative | test positive (verb): if you take a test for
an infection and you test negative, that means you do not have the infection.
If you test positive, that means you have the infection. - The President is pleased
to announce that he has tested negative for the virus.
transmission (noun): transfer of a disease from animal to
human or from human to human - Transmission of many diseases can be direct or
indirect.
transmit (verb) - often passive: cause a disease to pass
from animal to human or from human to human - Many diseases are transmitted
through physical contact.
treat (verb): attempt to cure or alleviate an illness or
injury through medical care - Doctors cannot currently treat COVID-19 directly
and instead concentrate on relieving symptoms.
Treatment (noun): medical care given to a patient for an
illness or injury - There is currently no specific antiviral treatment for
COVID-19, and infected patients receive supportive care to help relieve
symptoms.
Vaccine (noun): a substance used to protect humans and
animals from a disease - A vaccine for cholera was invented in 1879.
Viral (adjective): describing something like, caused by, or
relating to a virus or viruses - Antibiotics cannot be used to treat viral
infections because they don't kill viruses, only bacteria.
virus (noun): a living thing, too small to be seen without a
microscope, that causes infectious disease in animals and humans - Like all
diseases caused by viruses, the common cold cannot be cured with antibiotics.
Zoonotic (adjective): describing a disease that can be
transmitted from animals to humans - To protect yourself from zoonotic diseases
it's best to avoid bites and scratches from animals.

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