Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Research Officials Return From Geneva With Plan To Tackle Coronavirus

The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2020 09:11 PM

    OTTAWA - Canada will aim $6.5 million at research on stopping the spread of the novel coronavirus, after co-ordinating with researchers around the world on tackling the outbreak.

     

    Representatives of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) are returning from two days of talks with the international research community at a World Health Organization forum in Geneva, Switzerland.

     

    There, more than 300 scientists and researchers mapped out a plan to answer the questions that linger about the virus that has killed more than 1,000 people, and agreed on a set of research priorities.

     

    Chinese researchers participated remotely, and their message was that research should be focused on keeping people alive.

     

    "That's a good lens, because this is a rapid emergency response," said Charu Kaushic, scientific director of CIHR's Institute of Infection and Immunity, from her hotel room in Geneva. Kaushic is also a professor at McMaster University in Hamilton.

     

    That could mean developing medical therapies or a vaccine in the long term. China, where the virus was first detected and where most of its victims live, is already testing dozens of potential drug treatments.

     

    In the meantime though, researchers will be tailoring their studies to focus on infection prevention, quarantine protocols, personal protection measures, and other ways to keep the virus at bay. The WHO aims to study not only possible vaccines and therapies, but also the effectiveness of the public-health response and the social impact the disease has inflicted on the world.

     

    The novel coronavirus has so far infected more than 45,000 people.

     

    CIHR and several other Canadian research bodies have pulled together $6.5 million to hand out as research grants for science on the outbreak, and expect more money to be forthcoming as they continue negotiations with the federal government.

     

    The group put out a call for research proposals Monday, and Kaushic said she will spend the next 24 hours refining applications so they align with the World Health Organization's priorities.

     

    The institute has suggested researchers look at everything from medical interventions to the spread of fear and discrimination caused by the virus.

     

    The applications for the Canadian funding will be evaluated as quickly as possible, with the hope that researchers will be able to get to work before the end of the month.

     

    An unusual requirement will be placed on the winning grant recipients: they'll be expected to attend meetings with other global researchers to continue the co-ordinated approach to fighting the virus.

     

    "This outbreak is a test of solidarity — political, financial and scientific," said WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus in a statement Wednesday.

     

    "We need to come together to fight a common enemy that does not respect borders, ensure that we have the resources necessary to bring this outbreak to an end and bring our best science to the forefront to find shared answers to shared problems."

     

    The international community will come together again in several months to see if there are any research gaps.

     

    While the vast majority of confirmed Covid-19 cases are in China, the research community agreed the world must be prepared for the outbreak to overflow the country's borders.

     

    "We don't know how this is going to play out, which is why we can't stop at this point," Kaushic said. "We have to continue with the worst-case scenario."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Liberals: Two Years Of NDP Failures Aren’t Helping People Get Ahead

    After almost three years of the NDP failing to keep their big election promises, people across the province continue to hear empty words and see no action from John Horgan in today’s Speech from the Throne.  

    BC Liberals: Two Years Of NDP Failures Aren’t Helping People Get Ahead

    Langley Shooting Victim Ravinder Sandhu Is Dead

    On February 7th, at approximately 9:35 p.m., Langley RCMP was called to the a parking lot in the 6300 block of 200th Street for a report of a shooting.

    Langley Shooting Victim Ravinder Sandhu Is Dead

    Mounties Looking For Missing 61-Year-Old Woman Monica Winter And Her Dog

    Police immediately began a search and later confirmed she was last seen on February 7, 2020, leaving from work in the 1200-block of West Broadway Avenue in Vancouver.    

    Mounties Looking For Missing 61-Year-Old Woman Monica Winter And Her Dog

    Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond

    Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond
    The male was identified as Coleton SZALAY. SZALAY had a Canada-wide warrant stemming from a robbery out of Vancouver as well as a warrant for theft under $5,000 out of Richmond.  

    Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond

    Pipeline Protests Hit B.C. Legislature And Canada's Rail Network

    Hundreds of protesters blocked the entrances to the British Columbia legislature on Tuesday as demonstrations in support of Indigenous hereditary chiefs who oppose a pipeline project continued to flare across the country.

    Pipeline Protests Hit B.C. Legislature And Canada's Rail Network

    Provincial Health Officer Says Four People With Coronavirus In B.C. Doing Well

    Dr. Bonnie Henry says the individuals in the Vancouver region are being monitored by health professionals and three of them are living in a home with others.

    Provincial Health Officer Says Four People With Coronavirus In B.C. Doing Well