Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Essay

Words: 1788
Pages: 8

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome In 2003, a strange epidemic trembles the unsuspecting world as the mysterious killer virus was discovered in southern china. Carried by a human incubator to the international airport in Hong Kong, innocently not knowing that the virus is being spread from one person to another by means of airborne ways, from there the virus was spread around the world by airplane passengers from all over the world, infecting over 8,000 people in twenty-sever countries. More than 800 people died before the virus was brought down, being under controlled a few months later after the outbreak. It all began in November 2002, with a small outbreak of the untreatable “typical pneumonia” in the city of Foshan province of Guangdong, …show more content…
The infected people suffers a feverish chills and increasingly being breathless, with chronic coughs, as the virus from SARS colonizes the sacs of the lungs, destroying and inhabiting the lung’s delicate linings and filling them up with fluid. By the time people realize that the illness is starting to worsen, they find themselves fighting for breathe and are immediately sent to ICU (Intensive Care unit) to get hooked up with mechinal ventilation breathing units to help patients breathe and help alleviate the pain of having chest congestions, the ICU also help to confined the infected patients by segregation and total space confinement avoiding the spread of the virus throughout the hospital. Coughing from infected patients can generate a tiny spray of virus-laden droplets of mucus, having anyone in the vicinity of the space the infected person coughs, is in high risk of getting infected. Family and friends that are casually visiting their love ones in the hospital are at high risk as well, hospital workers are among the casualties, after helping to save lives by clearing the airways and ventilations, and performing resuscitations to other